Mechanism of Alzheimer's disease: Arguments for a neurotransmitter-aluminium complex implication |
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Authors: | Roger Deloncle Olivier Guillard |
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Affiliation: | (1) Bio-Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, Faculty of Pharmacy, 2 Bis Boulevard Tonnellé, 37042 Tours, (FRANCE);(2) Departments of Biochemistry and Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, 34 Rue du Jardin des Plantes, 86034 Poitiers, (FRANCE) |
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Abstract: | The authors are convinced that in Alzheimer's disease, as in Down's syndrome and Guam-Parkinson dementia, one may find an alteration in blood brain barrier transfer and a resultant imbalance in mineral metabolism. Metals, such as aluminium, which in vivo yield stable complexes with aspartic and glutamic acids act as previously been clearly shown with glutamic acid; they cross the blood brain barrier, and are deposited in the brain. The authors explain how amyloid protein or neurofibrillary tangles could well be produced by aluminium complex formation. Whithin the brain, in the form precisely of aluminium complex,l-glutamic acid is consequently unable to detoxify ammonia from neurons and to produce L-glutamin. Accumulation of ammonia is subsequently responsible for the neuronal death, affecting each and every neurotransmitter system. |
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Keywords: | Alzheimer blood brain barrier aluminium glutamic acid ammonia neurons brain |
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