4.6 Review

Taking aim at Alzheimer's disease through the mammalian target of rapamycin

Journal

ANNALS OF MEDICINE
Volume 46, Issue 8, Pages 587-596

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.3109/07853890.2014.941921

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; amyloid; apoptosis; autophagy; mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR); mTORC1; mTORC2; necroptosis; oxidative stress; rapamycin

Funding

  1. Kenneth Maiese: American Diabetes Association
  2. American Heart Association (National)
  3. Bugher Foundation Award
  4. Janssen Neuroscience Award
  5. LEARN Foundation Award
  6. NIH NIEHS
  7. NIH NIA
  8. NIH NINDS
  9. NIH ARRA

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A significant portion of the world's population suffers from sporadic Alzheimer's disease (AD) with available present therapies limited to symptomatic care that does not alter disease progression. Over the next decade, advancing age of the global population will dramatically increase the incidence of AD and severely impact health care resources, necessitating novel, safe, and efficacious strategies for AD. The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and its protein complexes mTOR Complex 1 (mTORC1) and mTOR Complex 2 (mTORC2) offer exciting and unique avenues of intervention for AD through the oversight of programmed cell death pathways of apoptosis, autophagy, and necroptosis. mTOR modulates multi-faceted signal transduction pathways that involve phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-K), protein kinase B (Akt), hamartin (tuberous sclerosis 1)/tuberin (tuberous sclerosis 2) (TSC1/TSC2) complex, prolinerich Akt substrate 40 kDa (PRAS40), and p70 ribosomal S6 kinase (p70S6K) and can interface with the neuroprotective pathways of growth factors, sirtuins, wingless, forkhead transcription factors, and glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta. With the ability of mTOR to broadly impact cellular function, clinical strategies for AD that implement mTOR must achieve parallel objectives of protecting neuronal, vascular, and immune cell survival in conjunction with preserving networks that determine memory and cognitive function.

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