Innate immune activation associated with AD attenuated by βOHB?

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Julie G
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Innate immune activation associated with AD attenuated by βOHB?

Post by Julie G »

Here’s a great paper that explores the role of inflammation in AD, in particular low grade chronic inflammation from a variety of sources. Dr. VanItallie makes a good case for the innate immune system being affected in AD; whereas the adaptive immune system is affected in other neurodegenerative illnesses like MS. ApoE4 carriers have been found to have variations in our innate immune system that tilt it towards chronic upregulation. Mouse studies have demonstrated that the use of β-hydroxybutyrate (βOHB) protects the brain from the adverse effects of chronic inflammation. The author calls for studies in humans to see if it has the same effect.

Alzheimer's disease: Innate immunity gone awry?
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 9517300185
Abstract
Inflammation is an immune activity designed to protect the host from pathogens and noxious agents. In its low-intensity form, presence of an inflammatory process must be inferred from appropriate biomarkers. Occult neuroinflammation is not just secondary to Alzheimer's disease (AD) but may contribute to its pathogenesis and promote its progression. A leaky blood–brain barrier (BBB) has been observed in early AD and may play a role in its initiation and development. Studies of the temporal evolution of AD's biomarkers have shown that, in AD, the brain's amyloid burden correlates poorly with cognitive decline. In contrast, cognitive deficits in AD correlate well with synapse loss. Oligomeric forms of amyloid-beta (oAβs) can be synaptotoxic and evidence of their deposition inside synaptic terminals of cognition-associated neurons explains early memory loss in AD better than formation of extracellular Aβ plaques. Among innate immune cells that reside in the brain, microglia sense danger signals represented by proteins like oAβ and become activated by neuronal damage such as that caused by bacterial endotoxins. The resulting reactive microgliosis has been implicated in generating the chronic form of microglial activation believed to promote AD's development. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have yielded data from patients with sporadic AD indicating that its causes include genetic variation in the innate immune system. Recent preclinical studies have reported that β-hydroxybutyrate (βOHB) may protect the brain from the adverse effects of both the nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptor protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome and the deacetylation of histone. Consequently, there is an urgent need for clinical investigations designed to test whether an orally administered βOHB preparation, such as a ketone ester, can have a similar beneficial effect in human subjects.
For those who live in areas where the use of http://sci-hub.bz is legal, you can access full pre-publication text.
MAC
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Re: Innate immune activation associated with AD attenuated by βOHB?

Post by MAC »

Interesting indeed. Tanzi/Stephens are chasing this innate human activation theory as well.

But I thought most all the βOHB research on HUMAN showed some effect, but ONLY E4 (-) negative persons?

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2604900/
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 13107/full
http://www.accerapharma.com/portfolio/ac-1204/
http://multivu.prnewswire.com/broadcast ... eutics.pdf

Endless pathways! Arghh
MAC
E3/E4-59/MALE
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