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Home > Vaccines and Dementia: Part I. Non-Specific Immune Boosting with BCG: History, Ligands, and Receptors.

TitleVaccines and Dementia: Part I. Non-Specific Immune Boosting with BCG: History, Ligands, and Receptors.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsGreenblatt, CL, Lathe, R
JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
Volume98
Issue2
Pagination343-360
Date Published2024
ISSN1875-8908
KeywordsAdjuvants, Immunologic, BCG Vaccine, Dementia, Humans, Ligands, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Tuberculosis, Tuberculosis Vaccines
Abstract

Vaccines such as Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) can apparently defer dementia onset with an efficacy better than all drugs known to date, as initially reported by Gofrit et al. (PLoS One14, e0224433), now confirmed by other studies. Understanding how and why is of immense importance because it could represent a sea-change in how we manage patients with mild cognitive impairment through to dementia. Given that infection and/or inflammation are likely to contribute to the development of dementias such as Alzheimer's disease (Part II of this work), we provide a historical and molecular background to how vaccines, adjuvants, and their component molecules can elicit broad-spectrum protective effects against diverse agents. We review early studies in which poxvirus, herpes virus, and tuberculosis (TB) infections afford cross-protection against unrelated pathogens, a concept known as 'trained immunity'. We then focus on the attenuated TB vaccine, BCG, that was introduced to protect against the causative agent of TB, Mycobacterium tuberculosis. We trace the development of BCG in the 1920 s through to the discovery, by Freund and McDermott in the 1940 s, that extracts of mycobacteria can themselves exert potent immunostimulating (adjuvant) activity; Freund's complete adjuvant based on mycobacteria remains the most potent immunopotentiator reported to date. We then discuss whether the beneficial effects of BCG require long-term persistence of live bacteria, before focusing on the specific mycobacterial molecules, notably muramyl dipeptides, that mediate immunopotentiation, as well as the receptors involved. Part II addresses evidence that immunopotentiation by BCG and other vaccines can protect against dementia development.

DOI10.3233/JAD-231315
Alternate JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
PubMed ID38393912
PubMed Central IDPMC10977417
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Source URL: https://www.j-alz.com/content/vaccines-and-dementia-part-i-non-specific-immune-boosting-bcg-history-ligands-and-receptors