Mechanistic Model
Overview
This hypothesis establishes that Alzheimer's disease neuropathology is defined by the accumulation of pathological amyloid-beta (Aβ) in the form of senile plaques and dystrophic neurites, and phosphorylated tau neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) [1]. These two proteinaceous lesions form the pathological basis of the disease and drive the characteristic neurodegeneration and cognitive decline observed in [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease). [@ittner2011]
Type: Disease Model [@strooper2016]
Confidence Level: Established (Century-old consensus) [@goate1991]
Diseases Associated: [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), Down syndrome (trisomy 21), [Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy](/diseases/cerebral-amyloid-angiopathy) [@strittmatter1993]
Amyloid-Beta Pathology
Production and Processing
[Amyloid precursor protein (APP)](/genes/app) undergoes proteolytic processing via two pathways: [@jonsson2012]
Non-amyloidogenic pathway: α-secretase cleavage produces sAPPα and CTFα, precluding Aβ formation
Amyloidogenic pathway: β-secretase (BACE1) and γ-secretase cleavage produces Aβ peptides [2]The γ-secretase complex includes: [@blennow2018]
- [Presenilin 1 (PSEN1)](/genes/psen1) — catalytic subunit
- [Presenilin 2 (PSEN2)](/genes/psen2) — alternate catalytic subunit
- [Aph-1](/genes/aph1a), [Pen-2](/genes/pen2), [Nicastrin](/genes/ncstn) — accessory subunits
Aβ Peptide Species
...
Mechanistic Model
Overview
This hypothesis establishes that Alzheimer's disease neuropathology is defined by the accumulation of pathological amyloid-beta (Aβ) in the form of senile plaques and dystrophic neurites, and phosphorylated tau neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) [1]. These two proteinaceous lesions form the pathological basis of the disease and drive the characteristic neurodegeneration and cognitive decline observed in [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease). [@ittner2011]
Type: Disease Model [@strooper2016]
Confidence Level: Established (Century-old consensus) [@goate1991]
Diseases Associated: [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), Down syndrome (trisomy 21), [Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy](/diseases/cerebral-amyloid-angiopathy) [@strittmatter1993]
Amyloid-Beta Pathology
Production and Processing
[Amyloid precursor protein (APP)](/genes/app) undergoes proteolytic processing via two pathways: [@jonsson2012]
Non-amyloidogenic pathway: α-secretase cleavage produces sAPPα and CTFα, precluding Aβ formation
Amyloidogenic pathway: β-secretase (BACE1) and γ-secretase cleavage produces Aβ peptides [2]The γ-secretase complex includes: [@blennow2018]
- [Presenilin 1 (PSEN1)](/genes/psen1) — catalytic subunit
- [Presenilin 2 (PSEN2)](/genes/psen2) — alternate catalytic subunit
- [Aph-1](/genes/aph1a), [Pen-2](/genes/pen2), [Nicastrin](/genes/ncstn) — accessory subunits
Aβ Peptide Species
| Species | Length | Aggregation | Toxicity | [@jack2018]
|---------|--------|-------------|----------| [@palmqvist2024]
| Aβ1-38 | 38 aa | Low | Minimal | [@jankord2024]
| Aβ1-40 | 40 aa | Moderate | Moderate | [@oddo2003]
| Aβ1-42 | 42 aa | High | High | [@van2023]
| Aβ1-43 | 43 aa | Very high | Very high | [@sims2023]
Aβ42 and Aβ43 are more aggregation-prone and form the core of senile plaques [3].
Plaque Types
Diffuse plaques: Non-fibrillar Aβ deposits, often in pre-clinical stages
Core plaques: Dense-core Aβ with neuritic components
Plaques with dystrophic neurites: Neuronal processes surrounding plaques
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA): Aβ deposition in blood vessel walls [4]Dystrophic Neurites
Dystrophic neurites are swollen, tortuous neuronal processes surrounding amyloid plaques:
- Accumulate in response to local Aβ toxicity
- Contain phosphorylated tau, ubiquitin, and other proteins
- Represent early sign of neuronal injury
- Correlate with local synaptic loss [5]
Tau Pathology
Tau Biology
[Tau](/proteins/tau) is a microtubule-associated protein encoded by the [MAPT](/genes/mapt) gene:
- Six isoforms (0N3R to 4N4R) via alternative splicing
- Binds to and stabilizes microtubules
- Primarily expressed in neurons
- Regulates axonal transport and synaptic function [6]
Hyperphosphorylation
In AD, tau becomes abnormally phosphorylated at >45 sites:
Key phosphorylation sites:
- Ser202/Thr205 (AT8 epitope)
- Thr212/Ser214 (AT100 epitope)
- Ser396/Ser404 (PHF-1 epitope)
- Thr181 (CSF biomarker)
Kinases involved:
- [GSK-3β](/proteins/gsk-3-beta) — primary tau kinase
- [CDK5](/genes/cdk5r1) — neuronal tau kinase
- MAPK family members [7]
Neurofibrillary Tangles
NFTs consist of paired helical filaments (PHFs) and straight filaments:
Pretangles: Soluble hyperphosphorylated tau in cytoplasm
Intracellular NFTs: Fibrillar tau in neuronal soma
Extracellular NFTs: "Ghost tangles" after neuron deathNFTs follow a predictable anatomical progression (Braak staging) [8]:
| Stage | Regions Affected | Clinical Correlation |
|-------|------------------|---------------------|
| I-II | Transentorhinal | Preclinical |
| III-IV | Limbic (hippocampus, amygdala) | MCI |
| V-VI | Isocortical | Dementia |
Relationship Between Aβ and Tau
The Amyloid Cascade Hypothesis
The amyloid cascade hypothesis posits that Aβ accumulation is the primary trigger:
Aβ accumulation → synaptic dysfunction
Synaptic loss → tau hyperphosphorylation
NFT formation → neuronal death
Neurodegeneration → cognitive decline [9]Evidence for Aβ-Tau Interaction
Supporting evidence:
- Aβ promotes tau pathology in animal models [10]
- Tau facilitates Aβ toxicity [11]
- Spatial correlation between plaques and NFTs
- Genetic evidence (APP, PSEN1, PSEN2, APOE)
Challenging evidence:
- Plaque burden doesn't correlate with cognitive decline
- NFT burden strongly correlates with cognitive status
- Aβ-independent tauopathies exist
- Many elderly have plaques without dementia
Updated Model: Multi-hit Hypothesis
Current models suggest Aβ initiates a cascade, but multiple factors determine progression:
- Aβ as an "amplifier" rather than sole cause
- Tau spread via trans-synaptic mechanisms
- Role of neuroinflammation, glial activation
- Genetic modifiers (APOE, [TREM2](/genes/trem2)) [12]
Evidence Assessment
Confidence Level: Established
| Evidence Type | Strength | Key Studies |
|---------------|----------|-------------|
| Histopathology | Strong | [1, 4, 8] |
| Genetic Studies | Strong | [13, 14, 15] |
| Biomarker Studies | Strong | [16, 17, 18] |
| Animal Models | Strong | [19, 20] |
| Clinical Trials | Moderate | [21, 22] |
Key Supporting Studies
Katzman (1988) — Established Aβ plaques and NFTs as the defining lesions of AD [1]
Goate et al. (1991) — First PSEN1 mutation linked to familial AD [13]
Strittmatter et al. (1993) — APOE ε4 as major genetic risk factor [14]
Braak & Braak (1991) — Systematic staging of NFT pathology [8]
Jack et al. (2018) — AT(N) biomarker classification framework [17]Testability Score: 10/10
- Post-mortem histopathology definitively identifies both lesions
- PET ligands detect plaques (Flutemetamol, Florbetapir) and tau (Flortaucipir) in vivo
- CSF biomarkers measure Aβ42, total tau, and phosphorylated tau
- Multiple therapeutic trials target Aβ and tau
Therapeutic Potential Score: 8/10
- Three anti-Aβ antibodies now FDA-approved (Lecanemab, Donanemab, Aduhelm)
- Active tau immunotherapy trials in progress
- Earlier intervention correlates with better outcomes
Key Proteins and Genes
| Protein/Gene | Role | Relevance |
|--------------|------|-----------|
| [APP](/genes/app) | Aβ precursor | Genetic cause of familial AD |
| [PSEN1](/genes/psen1) | γ-secretase | Most common familial AD gene |
| [PSEN2](/genes/psen2) | γ-secretase | Less common familial AD |
| [APOE](/genes/apoe) | Lipid transport | Major genetic risk factor |
| [TREM2](/genes/trem2) | Microglial receptor | Genetic risk factor (late onset) |
| [MAPT](/genes/mapt) | Tau protein | Tau gene, risk for tauopathies |
| [BIN1](/genes/bin1) | Bridging integrator | GWAS hit for sporadic AD |
Clinical Implications
Diagnostic Criteria
The NIA-AA research framework uses biomarker evidence:
- A+ (Amyloid positive): PET or CSF evidence
- T+ (Tau positive): PET or CSF evidence
- N+ (Neurodegeneration): Atrophy, hypometabolism, or elevated t-tau
"AD" is now defined by A+T+ status, regardless of clinical symptoms [17].
Biomarker Staging
| Stage | Biomarkers | Clinical |
|-------|-----------|----------|
| Preclinical | A+ T- N- | Normal cognition |
| MCI due to AD | A+ T+ N- | Mild impairment |
| Dementia due to AD | A+ T+ N+ | Dementia |
Therapeutic Implications
Approved anti-amyloid therapies:
- Lecanemab (Leqembi): Aβ protofibril antibody, 27% slowing of decline [21]
- Donanemab (Kisunla): N-terminal Aβ antibody, 35% slowing of decline [22]
In development:
- Tau immunotherapies (Semorinemab, Tilavonemab)
- BACE inhibitors (stopped due to side effects)
- Aggregation inhibitors
- [In Alzheimer's disease, biomarker events occur in a specific temporal sequence](/hypotheses/alzheimer's-disease,-biomarker-events-occur) — Aβ first, then tau, then neurodegeneration
- [Amyloid plaque and neurofibrillary tangle deposition relationship](/hypotheses/amyloid-plaque-neurofibrillary-tangle-depositi) — mechanistic interaction
- [Alterations in intra-regional functional connectivity](/hypotheses/hyp_146258) — Aβ and tau drive connectivity changes
See Also
- [Alzheimer's Disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
- [Amyloid-Beta](/proteins/amyloid-beta)
- [Tau Protein](/proteins/tau)
- [Amyloid Plaques](/mechanisms/dopaminergic-neuron-vulnerability)
- [Neurofibrillary Tangles](/mechanisms/neurofibrillary-tangles)
- [Senile Plaques](/mechanisms/dopaminergic-neuron-vulnerability)
- [APP](/genes/app)
- [Presenilin 1](/mechanisms/dopaminergic-neuron-vulnerability)
- [Presenilin 2](/mechanisms/dopaminergic-neuron-vulnerability)
- [APOE](/genes/apoe)
- [Mild Cognitive Impairment](/investment/mci)
External Links
- [Alzheimer's Association](https://www.alz.org/)
- [Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)](https://adni.loni.usc.edu/)
- [SEA-AD Project](https://www.alzheimers.gov/alzheimers-dementias/alzheimers-disease-brain-cell-atlas-sea-ad)
- [Allen Institute for Brain Science](https://portal.brain-map.org/)
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