📖
wiki page

Hippocampal CA1 Pyramidal Neurons in Alzheimer's Disease

📖 Wiki Page
cell685 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Hippocampal CA1 Pyramidal Neurons in Alzheimer's Disease

Overview

Hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons are large, excitatory glutamatergic projection neurons located in the CA1 region of the hippocampus, a brain structure critical for memory formation and consolidation. These neurons represent one of the most vulnerable neuronal populations in Alzheimer's disease (AD), showing selective degeneration and functional decline early in disease pathogenesis. CA1 pyramidal neurons comprise approximately 50,000 neurons in the human hippocampus and form the primary output of the hippocampal circuit, receiving convergent input from CA3 pyramidal cells via Schaffer collaterals and from the entorhinal cortex via the temporoammonic pathway. The selective vulnerability of these neurons to AD pathology—including amyloid-beta accumulation, tau hyperphosphorylation, and synaptic loss—makes them central to understanding hippocampal-dependent cognitive decline in AD patients.

Function and Biology


...
📖 View canonical wiki page →
Related Entities
cell-types-hippocampal-ca1-pyramidal-alzheimers
View on SciDEX ↗