ACh 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Type of transmission in basal forebrain cholinergic pathways>?

A

both wired and volume

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2
Q

cholinergic pathways in the brain

A

Diagram

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3
Q

Nucleus Basalis of Meynert

A

Considered to be the site of confluence of the
limbic system and the ascending arousal system • Non-cholinergic cells include GABAergic,
peptidergic and NADPH diaphorase positive types
(nNOS?) • Receives input selectively from limbic cortices
and amygdala (NOT all cortices) • Receives brain stem input – dopaminergic,
tryptaminergic and noradrenergic • Receives cholinergic input – from Ch1-3, and/or
pontine groups

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4
Q

ACh and cognition

A

o Working memory
o Attention
o Episodic memory
o Spatial memory

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5
Q

Discovery of Alzheimer’s disease

A

First described by Alois Alzheimer in 1902.
• First patient, Auguste Deter, said: “I seem to
have lost myself”. She died 5 years after her
diagnostic.
• Alzheimer called it “Disease of
forgetfulness”.
• Originally considered to be pre-senile
dementia, but now we know is the most
common form of dementia in the elderly.

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6
Q

Epidemiology of Alzheimer’s disease

A

The most common neurodegenerative disease, accounting
for >80% of total dementia cases in the elderly.
• There are currently 47 million sufferers worldwide and it is
predicted this will grow to 130 million by 2050 because of
increase in life expectancy.
• In 2015, the annual societal and economic cost of
dementia was US$818 billion worldwide. This amount is
expected to increase to 1 trillion by 2018.
• In England and Wales 163,000 new cases every year (one
every 3.2 minutes).

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7
Q

Clinical manifestations of Alzheimer’s disease

A
Symptom pattern begins with
progressive decline in ability to
remember new information.
• Disruption of neuronal function
usually begins in brain regions
involved in forming new memories.
• Progression from episodic memory
problems to global decline of
cognitive function.
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8
Q

Anatomopathology of Alzheimer’s disease

A
Progressive loss of synaptic
neurons
• Atrophy of hippocampus,
frontal and temporoparietal
cortex
• Accumulation of amyloid beta
(Aβ) plaques around neurons • Hyperphosphorylated
microtubules associated with
tau protein in the form of
intracellular neurofibrillary
tangles (NFT)
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9
Q

Pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease

A

Unknown; multifactorial • Cholinergic transmission • Excessive protein misfolding and Aβ aggregation • Oxidative stress and free radical formation • Metal dyshomeostasis • Excitotoxic and neuroinflammatory processes • Tau pathology

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10
Q

Cholinergic hypothesis of Alzheimer’s

A
Degeneration of neurons
from the cholinergic nuclei in
the basal forebrain region
(specially the nucleus basalis
of Meynert) and their
terminals in the
hippocampus.
• Hippocampal atrophy and ventricle enlargement.
• No effect on Brainstem Cholinergic Pathways(?)
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11
Q

Acetylcholinesterase

A
Peripheral anionic site (PAS)
important in AD.
• Interaction of Aβ and PAS
contributes to formation of
amyloid plaques
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12
Q

Butyrylcholinesterase

A

Expressed in the hippocampus and temporal neocortex but at lower levels than AChE. Mainly present in endothelia, glia and
neuronal cells with low affinity for ACh.
• In AD brain, BuChE associates with Aβ protein and may delay
onset and rate of neurotoxic Aβ fibril formation.
• In AD, there is a progressive increase of BuChE:AChE ratio
associated with amyloid plaques and NFTs, and with gradual loss
of cognition function.

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13
Q

amyloid hypothesis

A

Diagram

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14
Q

neuroinflammation

A

diagram

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15
Q

Tau pathology

A

Diagram

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16
Q

Tacrine

A

Competitive AChE inhibitor and mAchRs modulator competitive (withdrawn)

17
Q

Rivastigmine

A

Non-selective pseudoreversible ChE inhibitor

18
Q

Galantamine

A

1) Reversible/competitive selective AChE inhibitor and nicotinic receptor modulator
2) NMDA receptor temptation

19
Q

Donepezil

A

Reversible non-competitive ChE inhibitor

20
Q

Memantine

A

1) NMDA receptor antagonist
2) Neuroprotective
and nAChRs (Aβ toxicity, tau phosphorylation,
neuroinflammation,
oxidative stress)

21
Q

Therapies against Aβ

A
• Anti-Aβ immunotherapy:
antibodies against APP,
monomeric Aβ, soluble Aβ
oligomers, insoluble Aβ fibrils,
Aβ carrier proteins and
transport channels.
• γ- and β-secretase inhibitors
22
Q

Tau-targeted therapies

A

• Tau pathology may be the cause of Aβ pathology.
• Strategies:
1. Inhibition tau fibril
formation (chemical) 3

  1. Promotion abnormal tau
    clearance (antibodies, vaccination) 3. Inhibition tau aggregation