Saturday, August 16, 2008
Alzheimer’s Disease and Cholesterol: The Fat Connection
Abstract  Since the discovery of the significance of the cholesterol-carrying apolipoprotein E and cholesterolaemia as major risk factors         for Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) there has been a mounting interest in the role of this lipid as a possible pathogenic agent.         In this review we analyse the current evidence linking cholesterol metabolism and regulation in the CNS with the known mechanisms         underlying the development of Alzheimer’s Disease. Cholesterol is known to affect amyloid-β generation and toxicity, although         it must be considered that the results studies using the statin class of drugs to lower plasma cholesterol may be affected         by other effects associated with these drugs. Finally, we report some of our results pointing at the interplay between neurons         and astrocytes and NADPH oxidase activation as a new candidate mechanism linking cholesterol and AD pathology.
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