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Systematic Search for a Predictor for the Clinical Observables of Alzheimer's Disease.

Atanu Das
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2021)
One of the prevailing life-threatening incurable neurodegenerative diseases that are presently endangering human society as a whole, and hence, baffling the entire spectrum of the scientific and pharmaceutical world, is Alzheimer's disease (AD). AD is a manifestation of self-assembly of both wild-type (sporadic) and mutated (familial) forms of the amyloid-β peptide, a proteolytic product of the amyloid precursor protein, where the self-assembly results in the genesis of pathogenic fibrillar aggregates. Currently prevailing diagnostic and hence therapeutic challenges originate from the unavailability of a specific predictor for clinical observables. The continuous emergence of novel pathogenic mutants with unpredictable phenotypes adds immensely to the nonspecific nature of the problem. The current research reports a simple physical parameter, the binding affinity of a protofilament to its protofibril, which predicts the clinical observables of familial AD with astounding accuracy and more importantly, without any adjustable parameters.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • endothelial cells
  • cognitive decline
  • mental health
  • early onset
  • emergency department
  • late onset
  • transcription factor
  • drug induced
  • protein protein
  • pluripotent stem cells