A framework to understand the variations of PSD-95 expression in brain aging and in Alzheimer's disease.

Ageing Res Rev

Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital of Geneva, 10 chemin du Petit Bel-Air, CH-1225 Geneva, Switzerland.

Published: November 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • PSD-95 is a key protein at synapses linked to aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD), with varying expression levels in different brain regions, showing increases in the frontal cortex but decreases in the temporal cortex in AD.
  • Research findings on PSD-95 are inconsistent across studies, with factors like psychiatric conditions (e.g., depression) and environmental influences affecting its expression in both animal models and humans.
  • Understanding the dual role of PSD-95 in reactive and compensatory mechanisms during the progression of AD could help differentiate between harmful and protective processes, which is essential for developing effective treatments.

Article Abstract

The postsynaptic density protein PSD-95 is a major element of synapses. PSD-95 is involved in aging, Alzheimer's disease (AD) and numerous psychiatric disorders. However, contradictory data about PSD-95 expression in aging and AD have been reported. Indeed in AD versus control brains PSD-95 varies according to regions, increasing in the frontal cortex, at least in a primary stage, and decreasing in the temporal cortex. In contrast, in transgenic mouse models of aging and AD PSD-95 expression is decreased, in behaviorally aged impaired versus unimpaired rodents it can decrease or increase and finally, it is increased in rodents grown in enriched environments. Different factors explain these contradictory results in both animals and humans, among others concomitant psychiatric endophenotypes, such as depression. The possible involvement of PSD-95 in reactive and/or compensatory mechanisms during AD progression is underscored, at least before the occurrence of important synaptic elimination. Thus, in AD but not in AD transgenic mice, enhanced expression might precede the diminution commonly observed in advanced aging. A two-compartments cell model, separating events taking place in cell bodies and synapses, is presented. Overall these data suggest that AD research will progress by untangling pathological from protective events, a prerequisite for effective therapeutic strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2014.09.004DOI Listing

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