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European Journal of Pharmacology 2000-Mar

Nicotinic receptor subtypes in human brain ageing, Alzheimer and Lewy body diseases.

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E Perry
C Martin-Ruiz
M Lee
M Griffiths
M Johnson
M Piggott
V Haroutunian
J D Buxbaum
J Nãsland
K Davis

Mots clés

Abstrait

Human brain ageing is associated with reductions in a variety of nicotinic receptors subtypes, whereas changes in age-related disorders including Alzheimer's disease or Parkinson's disease are more selective. In Alzheimer's disease, in the cortex there is a selective loss of the alpha4 (but not alpha3 or 7) subunit immunoreactivity and of nicotine or epibatidine binding but not alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Epibatidine binding is inversely correlated with clinical dementia ratings and with the level of Abeta1-42, but not related to plaque or tangle densities. In contrast, alpha-bungarotoxin binding is positively correlated with plaque densities in the entorhinal cortex. In human temporal cortex loss of acetylcholinesterase catalytic activity is positively correlated with decreased epibatidine binding and in a transgenic mouse model over expressing acetylcholinesterase, epibatidine binding is elevated. In Parkinson's disease, loss of striatal nicotine binding appears to occur early but is not associated with a loss of alpha4 subunit immunoreactivity. Tobacco use in normal elderly individuals is associated with increased alpha4 immunoreactivity in the cortex and lower densities of amyloid-beta plaques, and with greater numbers of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. These findings indicate an early involvement of the alpha4 subunit in beta-amyloidosis but not in nigro-striatal dopaminergic degeneration.

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