ABSTRACT

A well-recognized theory of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathogenesis suggests ectopic cell cycle events to mediate neurodegeneration. Vulnerable neurons of the AD brain exhibit biomarkers of cell cycle progression and DNA replication suggesting a reentry into the cell cycle. Chromosome reduplication without proper cell cycle completion and mitotic division probably causes neuronal cell dysfunction and death. However, this theory seems to require some inputs in accordance with the generally recognized amyloid cascade theory as well as to explain causes and consequences of genomic instability (aneuploidy) in the AD brain. We propose that unscheduled and incomplete DNA replication (replication stress) destabilizes (epi)genomic landscape in the brain and leads to DNA replication “catastrophe” causing cell death during the S phase (replicative cell death). DNA replication stress can be a key element of the pathogenetic cascade explaining the interplay between ectopic cell cycle events and genetic instabilities in the AD brain. Abnormal cell cycle reentry and somatic genome variations can be used for updating the cell cycle theory introducing replication stress as a missing link between cell genetics and neurobiology of AD.

1. INTRODUCTION

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a serious public health problem representing one of the commonest causes of dementia in the elderly. Affecting tens of millions of people worldwide, AD is predicted to increase almost twice the frequency during the next 30 years [1]. Although genetic determinants of early-onset AD as well as several genomic loci and risk-enhancing genetic polymorphisms (CNVs or SNPs) of sporadic or late-onset AD have been determined, the overwhelming majority of cases (>95%) does not demonstrate reproducible associations with a specific genetic defect, and the etiology of AD in these cases remains largely unknown [2, 3]. Nonetheless, a line of evidences suggests that at least two major molecular (cellular) pathways are implicated in pathophysiology of AD. The first one considers the deposition of amyloid β-peptide (Aβ) as driving AD pathogenesis, whereas the second one elucidates abnormal cell cycle events as a cause of a discontinuous change of neuronal cell state/phenotype. However, regardless of the implication in AD neuropathology, these pathways are usually considered apart and the complex interplay between these two cycles (amyloid deposition cycle and abortive cell cycle) remains elusive [48].

The commonly accepted cell cycle theory of AD has been first proposed more than 15 years ago and has been repeatedly reviewed previously [710]. Since that time, numerous inputs in this theory have been made. More precisely, DNA replication in the AD brain was suggested as a consequence of reentry into the neuronal cell cycle preceding cell death (neurodegeneration) [11]; chromosome instability mediated by aneuploidy of chromosome 21 (probably resulting from cell cycle errors) was found to affect the AD brain [12]; selective neuronal death of aneuploid neurons was proposed to be a cause of progressive AD neurodegeneration [13]; numerous markers (protein biomarkers) of neuronal cell cycle were discovered in the AD brain [14, 15]. Finally, evidences for neuronal cell cycle events have led to hypothesize that failures of cell cycle regulation can be a root cause of AD neurodegeneration [8, 16]. Indeed, all these phenomena in neuronal cells have not been incorporated into an integrated pathway that is able to determine the meaning of “cell-cycle-related” processes in the diseased brain. In an attempt to fill this gap, we propose a hypothesis that is based on commonly accepted cell cycle theory of AD with special attention to the main event of the cell cycle period of DNA synthesis or S phase. Taking into account the available data, it was possible to extend this theory by suggesting inefficient DNA replication that causes DNA replication stress and replication-stress-induced DNA damage in neuronal cells as a missing element of AD pathogenetic cascade. DNA replication stress hypothesis of AD is able to provide a possible link between somatic genome instability, “Aβ deposition,” and “cell cycle” pathways. Additionally, empirical testing of the hypothesis is likely to help understanding the genomic mechanisms of neurodegenerative processes in the AD brain.

2. THEORETICAL BACKGROUND

The main principles of cycle theory of AD can be postulated as follows: (i) quiescent postmitotic neurons (previously entered stationary G0 cell cycle phase) unexpectedly reenter into the cell cycle (G1 phase); (ii) incompletely identified mitogenic stimuli probably induce the reentry of neurons into the cell cycle mediated by expression of cell cycle checkpoints (cell cycle regulatory proteins); (iii) diploid neurons (chromosome number: 2N, DNA content: 2C) replicate DNA during the S phase, and duplicated chromosomes possess two unseparated sister chromatids (chromosome number: 2N, DNA content: 4C) in contrast to “true” tetraploidy (chromosome number: 4N, DNA content: 4C); (iv) neurons completely replicate genomic DNA, a transition to the G2 phase occurs, but M phase is not achieved and neurons are arrested at the G2/M transition; (v) genomic content of a neuron passing from S to G2 phase is likely to change from diploid to “tetraploid” or 4C; (vi) changes of genomic landscape and genomic instabilities arising from abortive cell cycle seem to accumulate during ontogeny; (vii) since mitotic phase is not achieved, “G2-arrested neurons” with duplicated genomic content are likely to experience cell death [7, 911, 1419]. A simplified schematic representation of the cycle theory of AD is given in Figure 1.

A critical point of this theory is referred to DNA replication, which is the key event in S phase and is essential for completing cell division. It seems that replicative DNA synthesis in terminally differentiated neurons is a conditionally pathogenic response to endogenous or exogenous stimuli [18]. If DNA replication is processed completely, “affected neurons” would exhibit corresponding cell cycle protein biomarkers specific for G2 (i.e., Cyclin B, CDC2/CDK1) and “genetic biomarkers” such as a doubling of DNA content (4C) and chromosome duplication without separation of sister chromatids (chromosome number: 2 N and “tetraploid” DNA content: 4C) [11, 14, 15, 18]. Meanwhile, incomplete DNA replication, being highly probable in postmitotic cells, causes replication forks to progress slowly or to stall resulting in S phase arrest or replication stress. The latter leads to DNA damage or improper repair and, thereby, to accumulation of genomic instabilities [21, 22]. Abnormal DNA replication in postmitotic neurons is likely to be a source of intercellular variations of genomic content (2C 4C) in the AD brain [11, 12, 23, 24]. These are almost the same as those produced by replication stress in other human tissues [25, 26]. In addition, brain-specific aneuploidy, which is found to be implicated in AD pathogenesis [12, 13, 19, 23, 27, 28], can result from polyploidy [20, 29, 30], occurring before neuronal differentiation. Finally, genomic instabilities, in parts resulting from replication stress, have been repeatedly associated with neurodegeneration in aging-related diseases [3134].

Another feature of AD neurodegeneration that is closely related to numerical chromosome abnormalities (aneuploidy) is referred to neuropathological parallels between AD and Down syndrome (DS or trisomy of chromosome 21). In both sporadic and familial ADs, increased chromosome aneuploidy involving different chromosomes, particularly trisomy 21, in neurons and other cells is observed. It is noteworthy, that Down syndrome patients with trisomy 21 develop early onset AD pathology [27, 35]. It has been hypothesized that AD can be associated with mosaic tissue-specific aneuploidy of chromosome 21, being, in fact, a kind of mosaic DS [36]. This hypothesis has remained largely unproven because of controversial results obtained by different studies for several decades [19, 33, 3742], until it was experimentally proved by the direct evaluation of chromosome number 21 and structure in the AD brain [12]. Since somatic mosaicism mediated by mitotic aneuploidy is likely to be produced by abnormal mitotic/cell cycle checkpoint [20, 29, 43, 44], an opportunity to link chromosome 21 aneuploidy and cell cycle events in the AD brain seems to exist. To define a relationship between these two peculiarities of genome behavior in the AD brain, origins of aneuploidy in the diseased brain, which remain incompletely established, have to be considered. In an attempt to do so, one can notice a paradox: accumulation of genomic instabilities mediated by cell cycle errors suggests the completion of mitotic division, whereas postmitotic neurons are unlikely to process through the entire cell cycle. In this context, chromosome instability/aneuploidy can only be generated before neuronal differentiation or, in other words, during prenatal or early postnatal brain development (more than 50 years before the average age of AD manifestation). Additionally, human adult neurogenesis is not efficient enough to produce such amount of cells affected by genomic instability, even though neurogenesis is suggested to be enhanced in neurodegenerative diseases [45]. Finally, the amount of neuronal cells exhibiting abnormal “cell cycle phenotypes” is significantly lower [11, 16, 18] than those affected by genome/chromosome instability [12, 13]. To solve the paradox, a hypothesis proposing widespread genetic instability to accumulate during ontogenetic periods of extensive neurogenesis was recently proposed. According to this hypothesis, chromosome 21 aneuploidy persists throughout ontogeny until AD manifestation under natural selection (for more details see [19, 33, 41]). The latter is in agreement with observations of genomic instabilities in aging-related diseases and with “intrauterine programming” theory (DNA damage accumulation is supposed to be restricted to the embryonic period producing aging phenotypes during later ontogeny) [33, 41, 46]. The support of these assumptions can also be acquired from data on genomic content of cells populating the developing human brain, about one-third of which are aneuploid being extensively affected by chromosome instability [4749]. However, all these observations appear to be parts of the AD pathogenetic puzzle missing an important element that is able to link genomic instabilities in the diseased brain, cell cycle events in postmitotic neurons, and AD neuropathology. Finally, the possible link between DS and AD needs further experimental testing to establish causal relationship between brain pathology and nonmosaic trisomy 21 due to meiotic chromosome missegregation (the majority of DS patients) or mitotic mosaic trisomy in rare cases of DS and, probably, AD patients. Somatic mosaicism in mosaic DS and AD could be the result of chromosome nondisjunction at the earliest stages of the development. Alternatively, aneuploid neurons in the AD brain are likely to result from aberrant adult neurogenesis and gradual accumulation of aneuploid neurons, that is, due to mitogenic activity of plaque forming the proteins [27]. Therefore, accumulation of Aβ-peptide in the brain can be suggested to associate with overproduction of aneuploid neurons during ontogeny and brain aging AD [27].

3. HYPOTHESIS: DNA REPLICATION STRESS—A MISSING ELEMENT OF AD PATHOGENETIC CASCADE

Replication stress or inefficient DNA replication usually originates from alterations to DNA synthesis during S phase, abnormal expression of replication factors and DNA-binding proteins, and specificity of a number of DNA structures that are difficult to process by replicative machinery [21, 50]. Among the most likely consequences of replication stress, if unrecovered by the genome maintenance apparatus, are failures of DNA repair within specific genomic loci triggering genomic/chromosome instability [50, 51]. Generated during the S phase, alterations to chromosomes are maintained throughout the rest of cell cycle and are observed in daughter cells [50]. These can manifest as polyploidy and aneuploidy generated during the next cellular divisions of polyploid cells [25, 26, 50]. In the light of AD, it is to note that replication stress and its consequences are more frequent in aging tissues and are probably caused by exhaustion of DNA replication and repair machineries [52]. Once produced by replication stress, genomic instabilities persist through subsequent cell divisions as exemplified by studies of cancers [25, 26]. However, high rates of genomic instabilities (produced by replication stress and aneuploidy) can trigger tissue degeneration due to aneuploid cell death in as much as such damage to cellular genomes is incompatible with normal cell homeostasis [5356]. Similar pathway, in our opinion, seems to be applicable to AD.

Two major molecular and cellular pathways both of which can be produced by genetic defects (i.e., PS1 and APP gene mutations, trisomy of chromosome 21) and/or environmental factors—amyloid deposition and abortive cell cycle—are likely to lead to Alzheimer’s type dementia [28, 36]. Interestingly, mutations of AD genes (presenilins and APP) not only lead to increasing the production of Aβ and contribute to deposition of amyloid but also induce chromosome missegregation (generation of aneuploidy) and are involved in activation of neuronal mitotic/cell cycle checkpoint in the AD brain [25, 27, 28, 57, 58]. The activation is likely to underlie the abortive cell cycle in AD [7, 8, 11, 14, 16, 59] and to be a likely process enhancing the adult neurogenesis [45, 60] producing cells, genomic content of which is actually unknown. Abortive cell cycle in neuronal cells (cell cycle re-entry) is likely to begin at G0-G1 transition [11, 14, 16, 17]. Then, these cells have the potential to enter the S phase, to complete DNA replication, and to enter the G2 phase; however, the cell cycle is arrested at the G2-M transition [11, 1618]. The main outcome of this course of events is the presence of neurons with duplicated chromosomes or “tetraploidy” (tetraploid DNA content), which should be arrested in G2 phase (chromosomes with unseparated sister chromatids, chromosome content: 2N) [11, 15, 16]. However, evaluations of tetraploidy in the AD brain did not demonstrate this chromosome complement in neuronal cells of brain areas affected by neurodegeneration [12, 19, 61]. Nevertheless, cell cycle protein markers specific for both S and G2 phases are repeatedly found in the AD brain [711, 1418, 24, 62]. This suggests that cells may enter the S phase, but the G2 phase is not really achieved because of the lack of tetraploid cells. The discrepancy between data on genomic content (the presence of diploid and hyper-/hypoploid (aneuploid) cells instead of tetraploidy) and cellular biochemical profiling (immunoreactivity for G2 phase biomarkers) is paradoxical. A likely explanation of this paradox could be the “imitation” of cell cycle events (i.e., G2 phase) in vulnerable diploid neurons: cells exhibit biomarkers of G2 phase without complete replication of genomic DNA. Additionally, it is reasonable to propose that initiation and progression of unscheduled DNA synthesis may lead to accumulation of genomic instabilities, abortive DNA replication, and arrest of neuronal cells in S phase. DNA replication stress affects cellular homeostasis and can cause “DNA replication catastrophe” followed by cell death in abortive S phase (replicative cell death).

Both replication stress and chromosome missegregation are among abnormal cell cycle events usually triggering the accumulation of genomic instabilities [20, 22, 2530, 4144, 5356, 59]. Replication stress, indeed, might result from genomic instability due to replication fork staling of disrupted DNA structures (chromosomal/DNA breaks) [22] as well as can initiate abnormal intracellular processes leading to cell death during the S phase [11, 16, 23]. Another unresolved paradox is related to the abundance of chromosome 21 aneuploidy in the AD brain [12], whereas cell cycle errors and replication stress usually produce multiple types of genome/chromosome instability (i.e., tetraploidy or unreleased DNA/chromosome breaks) [15, 20, 22, 25, 26, 2931]. In other words, the source of aneuploidy in the human adult brain remains intriguingly unknown [19, 33, 41, 59]. Currently, origins of mosaic aneuploidy are assumed to result essentially from chromosomal nondisjunction during mitosis at early stages of ontogeny (prenatal development), and chromosome specificity of aneuploidy is likely to be achieved under natural selection within cellular populations [41, 48, 6365]. Thus, we have to admit that cells with chromosome 21 trisomy possess some advantages in terms of cellular physiology [33, 41, 64, 65]. Together, one can conclude that, despite of the accumulation of genomic instabilities in the diseased brain, those cells affected by chromosome 21 aneuploidy are potentially more viable than either tetraploid or non-chromosome-21-aneuploid cells. In addition, chromosome instability manifested as aneuploidy is an integral part of the developing human brain probably involved in generation of neuronal variability and complexity [44, 4749, 54, 66], experiencing, however, a significant decrease (~3 times) throughout further ontogenetic stages [12, 23, 47, 49, 59]. Therefore, selective pressure against aneuploid neurons is likely to exist in the unaffected human brain but seems to be altered in the brain of individuals affected by neurodegenerative diseases [18, 3234, 41, 59, 64]. Moreover, other types of genomic instabilities arising from abnormal DNA repair (including those produced by replication stress) are likely to be generated and to accumulate during prenatal development regardless of the manifestation at later ontogeny [33, 46]. Alternatively, the involvement of chromosome 21 aneuploidy in AD pathogenesis is supported by the fact that APP—a key element of the AD pathogenetic cascade—is located on chromosome 21 [26]. Furthermore, several indirect evidences for a contribution of aneuploidy of chromosome 21 and genomic instability to AD neurodegeneration such as shared susceptibility to aneuploidy and AD in mothers of DS children as well as markers of genome/chromosome instability (increased frequency of micronuclei) and oxidative stress associated with genomic instabilities in AD individuals have been previously provided [6769]. Since aneuploidy causes additional copies of APP (as exemplified by studies of DS), an opportunity to link genomic instability manifested as chromosome 21 aneuploidy with Aβ aggregation, deposition, and accumulation does exist [33, 35, 36, 39]. On the other hand, it has been recently shown that APP and Aβ are involved in mitotic/cell cycle abnormalities in neuronal cells associated with AD [27, 28]. Therefore, abnormal cell cycle events can be linked to amyloid deposition cycle through one key element of AD pathogenetic cascade—replication stress. The graphical overview of the replication stress hypothesis of AD is presented by Figure 2.

Although the role of DNA replication and numerical chromosome abnormalities in cellular pathology associated with Alzheimer’s type dementia has been proposed [11, 23], variable genomic landscape of neuronal cells experiencing cell death and cellular phenotype suggests a more complex interplay between cell cycle events, genetic instabilities, and neurodegeneration [12, 13, 23, 27, 61]. The present hypothesis is an attempt to provide a more general explanation of how all these data can be processed in order to give an integrated view of interplay between cell cycle events, amyloid deposition (increased Aβ42), and genomic instabilities affecting the AD brain. Since DNA replication has been consistently considered a critical event in abnormal neuronal cell cycle [11, 23], we have proposed to make a closer look at this phenomenon and to incorporate it into the unifying pathway for molecular and cellular mechanisms of AD.

4. IMPLICATIONS

The possibility to consider abnormal cell cycle events in the AD brain as therapeutic targets has been repeatedly proposed [7, 8, 19, 61, 70]. However, due to the lack of integrated view of cell cycle AD pathogenetic cascade, it was difficult to be more specific for selection of molecular interventions. Establishing the missing links in pathogenetic pathways seems to provide a closer, molecular-oriented look at possible therapies of this common and devastative neurodegenerative disease.

Testing DNA replication stress hypothesis can make a contribution to our understanding of the disease course and provide for identifying the sequence of abnormal events that generate pathologic cellular and organism phenotype. The latter is important for biomarker identification and development of preclinical molecular tests (i.e., analysis of chromosomal aneuploidy and genome instabilities, abnormal replicative activity of neural cells, etc.) before the manifestation of disease and, more importantly, identification of endogenous and environmental factors that promote abnormal cell cycle reentry and replication stress, which can be avoided by individuals at risk. Finally, the knowledge about the way abnormal cell cycle events and genomic/chromosome instabilities occur in the AD brain would allow disease prevention that is undoubtedly easier than a development of molecular therapies to treat the disease after clinical manifestation.

5. CONCLUSION

Solving the paradox of AD cell cycle theory arising from discrepancies between data on cell cycle biomarkers (i.e., G2-markers) and genomic content of neuronal cells leads to a speculation that neurons entered into S phase do not proceed further through the cell cycle. This suggests neuronal cell dysfunction and death to occur during the S phase (death in S phase) and to result from replication stress. In others words, unscheduled and unrealized DNA synthesis in vulnerable neurons should lead to DNA replication catastrophe and neuronal death due to lethal errors in replication (replicative cell death). The latter is likely to be partially caused by the impossibility of epigenetic reorganization of the nuclear genome for proper chromosome duplication. In this context, G2 phase biomarkers are likely to be a sign of cell cycle “imitation” or other intracellular phenomena accompanied by expression of cell-cycle proteins but not directly related to cell cycle events (i.e., DNA reparation, DNA damage response, and initiation of programmed cell death). DNA replication stress is a probable trigger of genome instability in the AD brain, which links abnormal cell cycle events, chromosomal aneuploidy, and Aβ production and deposition. Testing of the “DNA replication stress” or “DNA replicative death” hypothesis of AD would help to expand our views of how neural cell cycle dysregulation is involved in AD pathogenesis. Furthermore, it can give insights into current knowledge about the role of adult neurogenesis in the normal brain development and in the development of brain disease and the way how genome (epigenome) stability is maintained in neuronal cells through the lifespan.

Since abnormal cell cycle regulation has been repeatedly associated with a broad spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases (AD, Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ataxia-telangiectasia, and Niemann-Pick type C disease) [16, 18, 32, 34, 54, 59], a hypothesis proposing replication stress to be a critical event seems to be applicable for neurodegeneration, as a whole. To test the hypothesis, additional molecular cytogenetic and cytogenomic studies of DNA replication pattern and somatic genome instability in the AD brain are needed. These studies dedicated to identifying the role of genome instability and DNA replication in cell-cycle-mediated neuropathology would lead to establishing the etiology and pathogenesis of sporadic AD, which encompasses the majority of AD-type dementia. If confirmed, the present hypothesis, postulating the existence of a cascade of events including “DNA replication stress,” “DNA replication catastrophe” followed by “replicative cell death,” would provide for a molecular-oriented definition of neurodegeneration pathways and, as a result, would open new opportunities for molecular interventions in related devastative neurological and psychiatric disorders.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

The paper is dedicated to Ilia V. Soloviev. The authors are supported by DLR/BMBF Grants (RUS 09/006 and RUS 11/002).