“…Interestingly, silenced BACE1 (main enzyme involved in the production of βA), in the hippocampus using adenoassociated viral vectors reduces the hyperphosphorilation of tau (Piedrahita et al, 2016) and improve cognitive function at 6 months and 12 months post-treatment, presenting a balanced phospholipid composition, by the reduction of saturated fatty acid (stearic acid (18:0), palmitic acid (16:0)) and increase of poli-unsaturated fatty acid (docosahexaenoic acid, DHA (22:6)), which prevented the activation of pro-inflammatory signaling cPLA2/AA/COX2 in old AD mice to long-term post-therapy (Villamil-Ortiz et al, 2016). Also, the silencing of CDK5 in the CA1 hippocampal area prevents the spreading of excitoxicity to other areas of the neuronal circuit (Piedrahita et al, 2010; Castro-Alvarez et al, 2014, 2015; Posada-Duque et al, 2015a) also reversing (Piedrahita et al, 2010) or preventing neurodegeneration by reduction of paired helicoidal formations (Castro-Alvarez et al, 2014) and further, decreases the β amyloidosis production (Castro-Alvarez et al, 2015). The result could be assumed as it involves the prevention of Calpain activation by reduction of the active p25/CDK5 complex formation (Posada-Duque et al, 2015a) with a clear impact on the down-regulation of phosphorilation rate of tau (Castro-Alvarez et al, 2015), as well as regulation of phosphatases and GSK3β activity (Castro-Alvarez et al, 2015).…”