Awardee OrganizationRUSH UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
Description
Abstract Text
Although older (>65 years) individuals manifest cognitive impairments
ranging from mild abnormalities to overt dementia, the molecular and
cellular substrates that account for this variation remain to be defined.
Several reports indicate cholinergic hypofunction in elderly humans.
However, none of these studies related cholinergic changes to cognitive
status. The importance of this system to human cognition is
underscored by studies in Alzheimer's disease (AD) where the most
consistent neurochemical abnormality to crrelate with cognitive
impairment is decreases in cortical choline acetyltransferase (ChAT).
Interestingly, AD patients with an increased gene dose for the
apolipoprotein (ApoE) e4 allele (a genetic risk factor for AD) exhibit
greater cholinergic deficts (i.e., cortical ChAT reduction and
cholinergic basal forebrain(CBF) neuron loss) and are less responsive
to anticholinesterase drugs. The status of the CBF system and the
association of the ApoE genotype in aged individuals with mild
cognitive impairment (MCI), however, is still unknown. We do know,
however, that cortical ChAT levels decrease with aging in the human
brain. Therefore, Specific Aim 1 will establish whether CBF
degneration including reduction in cortical ChAT is associated with
cognitive impairment in individuals with MCI. Findings from our
group, have led to the hypothesis that the vulnerability of CBF
neurons results from defects in the binding or transport of NGF and
its high affinity signal transducing trkA receptor which, in turn, leads to
impaired NGF trophic support in AD. Support for this suggestion is
derived from our studies demonstrating that NGF protein-
immunoreactivity and the message for its high affinity trkA receptors
are decreased within CBF neurons whereas, cortical NGF protein is
increased in AD. Taken together these observations suggest that the
NGF protein accumulates within the cortex, because it is not
transported in a normal fashion to CBF consumer perikarya where it is
needed for its trophic effects to occur. Specific Aims 2-3 will
determine whether impaired NGF transport is also associated with
age-related MCI in the elderly. These studies will employ modern
stereology, bioassay, immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization
procedures. The results of these investigations will have major
implications for therapeutic strategies in aging and MCI and the role
of genetics in considering these issues.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
agingbioassaycholine acetyltransferaseclinical researchcognition disordershuman old age (65+)human tissueimmunocytochemistryin situ hybridizationneural degenerationneuropathologyneurotrophic factorsprosencephalon
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