Thursday May 4th 2023

Tags

Category

reMYND NV, a clinical stage company addressing neurodegeneration, is pleased to announce the publication of a review article in this month’s edition of Alzheimer’s and Dementia, exploring the role of calcium dyshomeostasis in driving neurodegeneration in dementia, particularly Alzheimer’s disease (AD).

The article, entitled Cytosolic calcium: judge, jury and executioner of neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease and beyond, provides a conceptual framework as to how a wide variety of AD risk factors promote the onset and progression of neurodegeneration through calcium dyshomeostasis.

AD is a heterogenous disease triggered by a multitude of different risk factors such as ageing, stress, cardiovascular disease and traumatic brain injury. Despite the diversity of initial triggers, the disease ultimately progresses to common disease outcomes such as cognitive decline, plaques and tangles. A prominent topic in the field relates as to the nature of common AD processes. Addressing this question is important because treatments targeting these processes might have the potential to reverse disease progression throughout the heterogeneous patient population.

The article concludes that dysregulated calcium homeostasis is a common pathway across AD, linking the major features of the disease. Consequently, therapeutic options that restore calcium homeostasis safely should have a robust neuroprotective potential, not only to counter symptoms but also to halt or delay ongoing neuronal demise in patients through disease modification. In order to fully test the hypothesis, treatments are needed that address calcium homeostasis in a safe way.

The full article can be accessed here:

Prof. Grace Stutzmann, Discipline Chair of Neuroscience at the Chicago Medical School, and Co-Author of the article added: “We are very proud of this collaborative work which documents the rich research history of calcium dysregulation in neurodegenerative disease, and provides a thorough overview of the mechanisms by which calcium dyshomeostasis leads in a progressive manner to AD. Furthermore, the complementary strengths of industry and academic perspectives contributes to the unique and up-to-date nature of this review, highlighting the exciting therapeutic potential of targeting calcium channels for AD.”

Dr Gerard Griffioen Chief Scientific Officer of reMYND and Co-Author of the article said: “Through this comprehensive review of research to date, we outline a clear connection between as to how AD risk factors impair calcium homeostasis to drive neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease. This understanding of the disease’s pathway is capitalized in reMYND’s Alzheimer’s ongoing clinical program, which seeks to address the disease at its root.”