Here within UCI MIND, we have devoted considerable resources to identifying the causes of Alzheimer’s disease, and finding ways to circumvent these causes. We have identified how the stress hormone cortisol can play a role in the development of Alzheimer’s disease. Cortisol is a steroid hormone that is produced in the adrenal gland in response to times of stress. In the short term, following a stressful experience, cortisol levels rapidly increase in the blood stream, and its presence is helpful – improving short-term memory formation and adapting the body’s physiology to deal with the situation effectively. However, long-term stress leads to prolonged elevated levels of cortisol within the blood stream, which can have serious deleterious effects.
It was found, over twenty years ago, that patients with Alzheimer’s disease had elevated levels of cortisol in their blood streams, compared to healthy patients. This elevation correlated with the degree of memory impairments that the patients had and appeared early on in the disease progression. We were interested in whether or not these early increases in circulating cortisol could be contributing to the development of Alzheimer’s disease, by leading to the pathologies that are found in the AD brain. It is the accumulation of sticky proteins in the brain, leading to a loss of neuronal function, which underlies the dementia and memory loss seen in Alzheimer’s disease. Typically 2 sticky proteins are present in the Alzheimer’s disease brain – the first is the amyloid-beta peptide(Ab), which stick together in between neurons and form the extracellular plaques. The second sticky protein is known as tau, which becomes modified in the Alzheimer’s disease brain causing it to stick together inside neurons and disrupting normal neuronal function. The net result of these sticky proteins is a cascade of events leading to widespread synaptic and neuronal loss in the brain, which causes the dementia and memory loss.
Relax! Avoid stress...
We showed that cells treated with cortisol produced dramatically larger amounts of this Ab peptide – which can accumulate to form the Ab plaques. In order to test whether increased cortisol could have a similar effect in animals and by extension people we turned to a genetically altered mouse, which had been engineered to develop Alzheimer’s disease pathology in its brain as it aged. We took young animals, before they were old enough to have Alzheimer’s disease pathology, and we injected them with a rodent equivalent of cortisol every day for 1 week. After just a single week we looked inside the brains of these animals and found that levels of both Ab peptide and tau protein were tremendously elevated. This showed us that increase in circulating cortisol in humans is able to increase the pathology present in the brain – and thus could make people develop Alzheimer’s disease faster.
So how can we use these findings to help people reduce their risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease in old age? Firstly, cortisol levels are increased by stress – a study has also shown that people with stressful lives are around 2-3 times more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease than others. So avoiding stress is paramount. In addition, these results can be used by scientists to develop drugs to block either the production of cortisol, or to prevent its effects once it is produced. This could lead to a slowing of the disease if it proves successful.
Stress reduction, combined with a healthy lifestyle and diet will help people age successfully and avoid disease.
(Source:http://www.alz.uci.edu/stress-and-its-influence-on-alzheimer%e2%80%99s-disease/)
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