• DocumentCode
    3129892
  • Title

    In Vivo and In Silico Evidence: Hippocampal Cholesterol Metabolism Decreases with Aging and Increases with Alzheimers Disease -- Modeling Brain Aging and Disease

  • Author

    Phelix, Clyde F. ; LeBaron, Richard G. ; Roberson, Dawnlee J. ; Villanueva, Rosa E. ; Villareal, Greg ; Rahimi, Omid B. ; Siedlak, Sandra ; Zhu, Xiongwei ; Perry, George

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    11-11 Dec. 2011
  • Firstpage
    1064
  • Lastpage
    1070
  • Abstract
    Genome wide association studies revealed genetic evidence for involvement of cholesterol metabolism in the etiology of Alzheimers disease (AD). The present study used gene expression profiles on human Cornu Ammonis 1(CA1) for subjects with severe AD and an age-matched group to determine the enzyme reaction rate constants for 16 core metabolic pathways including cholesterol biosynthesis, isoprenoid production, and cholesterol catabolism for removal from brain. The core metabolic model was used to simulate a young hippocampus (20-39yo) to compare with age-matched control group for our AD study (mean= 85.3y). In the aged human brain, the flux through the rate limiting step in the simulation for aged human hippocampus was lower by 9.5%, the cholesterol level was 52.3% lower in the simulation and 33.6% lower in the aged human brain, validating the in silico method. Data was also used to evaluate sterol regulatory element binding protein 1 and 2 (SREBP1 & SREBP2) showing the levels were increased significantly in the severe AD samples versus age-matched control. We predicted that the core metabolism simulation of severe AD versus age-matched control would show corresponding results and they do. The sensitivities analyses for incipient and severe AD demonstrated how they differ: Most reactions are insensitive for severe AD and two sensitive peaks are obvious, cholesterol and ubiquinone levels are most sensitive to cholesterol 24-hydroxylase, CYP46a1. These findings are consistent with statins being ineffective in clinical trials for treatment of AD, post-diagnosis.
  • Keywords
    brain models; diseases; enzymes; genetics; genomics; patient treatment; proteomics; Alzheimers disease; brain aging modeling; cholesterol biosynthesis; cholesterol catabolism; enzyme reaction rate constants; etiology; genetic evidence; genome wide association studies; hippocampal cholesterol metabolism; human Cornu Ammonis; in silico evidence; isoprenoid production; sterol regulatory element binding protein; ubiquinone levels; Aging; Brain modeling; Gene expression; Hippocampus; Humans; Proteins; metabolome; proteome; simulation; transcriptome;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Data Mining Workshops (ICDMW), 2011 IEEE 11th International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Vancouver, BC
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-0005-6
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICDMW.2011.98
  • Filename
    6137498