Authors
Scott Ayton, Peng Lei, Ashley I Bush
Publication date
2013/9/1
Source
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Volume
62
Pages
76-89
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
2012 has been another year in which multiple large-scale clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease (AD) have failed to meet their clinical endpoints. With the social and financial burden of this disease increasing every year, the onus is now on the field of AD researchers to investigate alternative ideas to deliver outcomes for patients. Although several major clinical trials targeting Aβ have failed, three smaller clinical trials targeting metal interactions with Aβ have all shown benefit for patients. Here we review the genetic, pathological, biochemical, and pharmacological evidence that underlies the metal hypothesis of AD. The AD-affected brain suffers from metallostasis, or fatigue of metal trafficking, resulting in redistribution of metals into inappropriate compartments. The metal hypothesis is built upon a triad of transition elements: iron, copper, and zinc. The hypothesis has matured from early investigations showing …
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Scholar articles
S Ayton, P Lei, AI Bush - Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2013