A qualitative analysis of an Aβ-monomer model with inflammation processes for Alzheimer’s disease
Metadatos
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The Royal Society
Materia
Alzheimer’s disease Persistence Bifurcation analysis
Fecha
2024-05-15Referencia bibliográfica
Ciuperca, I. R. Soc. Open Sci. 11: 231536.. [https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.231536]
Patrocinador
Agence National de la Recherche PrionDiff Project-ANR-21- CE15-0011; Juan de la Cierva FJC2021-046894-I; European Union Next Generation EU/PRTRResumen
We introduce and study a new model for the progression
of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) incorporating the interactions
of Aβ-monomers, oligomers, microglial cells and interleukins
with neurons through different mechanisms such as protein
polymerization, inflammation processes and neural stress
reactions. To understand the complete interactions between
these elements, we study a spatially homogeneous simplified
model that allows us to determine the effect of key parameters
such as degradation rates in the asymptotic behaviour of
the system and the stability of equilibrium. We observe that
inflammation appears to be a crucial factor in the initiation
and progression of AD through a phenomenon of hysteresis
with respect to the oligomer degradation rate d. This means
that depending on the advanced state of the disease (given
by the value of the Aβ-monomer degradation rate d: large
value for an early stage and low value for an advanced
stage) there exists a critical threshold of initial concentration
of interleukins that determines if the disease persists or
not in the long term. These results give perspectives on
possible anti-inflammatory treatments that could be applied
to mitigate the progression of AD. We also present numerical
simulations that allow us to observe the effect of initial
inflammation and monomer concentration in our model.