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    Pollution from car tires may contribute to Alzheimer’s disease

    stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comBy stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comJuly 11, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Pollution from car tires may contribute to Alzheimer's disease
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    Pollution from car tires may contribute to Alzheimer’s disease – Earth.com
    Cars queued in traffic with brake lights on, the kind of tire wear and pollution linked to Alzheimer's risk.
    07-11-2026

    Pollution from car tires may contribute to Alzheimer’s disease

    ByJordan Joseph
    Earth.com staff writer

    A pollutant that comes off ordinary car tires may help drive the brain damage behind Alzheimer’s disease

    A new study ran the chemical through a stack of computer models. It latches onto several of the genes most closely tied to the disease

    EarthSnap

    The work does not prove that traffic pollution causes dementia. But it does lay out a specific molecular route by which it might

    The chemical turns up in road dust, soil, water, and even human urine. Almost anyone who lives near traffic already carries some exposure

    Clues from salmon deaths

    The chemical is called 6PPD-quinone, and it begins as a rubber preservative. Tire makers add a compound called 6PPD to keep rubber from cracking as it ages

    As tires grind against the road, they shed microscopic particles. When those particles meet ozone in the air, the preservative transforms into 6PPD-quinone, a more toxic molecule

    Scientists first noticed it far from any clinic. For years, coho salmon returning to streams near Seattle died off after autumn rains, and no one could say why

    Then, a 2021 study traced the deaths to the tire-derived compound – turning a niche fish kill into a global pollution concern

    Implications for human health

    The compound has since turned up in water, soil, road dust, and human urine. This means that people are exposed as well

    The concern for human brains rests on one more clue

    In mice, 6PPD-quinone can slip past the blood-brain barrier – the tight cellular wall that keeps most toxins out of the brain. It does this within half an hour of exposure

    Chun Zhang and Jingqi Zhang set out to determine what the chemical might do once it arrives

    What the models revealed

    The researchers built their case using existing databases. They cross-referenced the proteins that 6PPD-quinone is predicted to interact with against genes already linked to Alzheimer’s disease

    The overlap came to 92 shared targets. Filtering that list down to its most connected members left 23 core genes, and these did not scatter randomly through the body

    They concentrated in brain areas hit hard by Alzheimer’s, including the outer cortex and the basal ganglia, structures buried deep in the brain

    A machine-learning model then ranked which genes best separated Alzheimer’s brains from healthy ones

    Five stood out as the strongest predictors, among them a master regulator of inflammation and the cell’s main controller of antioxidant defenses

    Testing the molecular fit

    The docking simulations tested whether 6PPD-quinone could physically attach to those genes’ proteins. In the models, it stuck

    The tightest fits were with three of the core proteins, among them the enzyme that fuels inflammation and the protein that helps tangle tau, whose knots are a hallmark of the disease

    These are predicted fits rather than measurements from living tissue. They mark where lab work could look next, not what has already happened inside a brain

    The pattern lines up with separate research. A 2025 paper that ran 6PPD and its quinone through a similar computational pipeline

    It flagged overlapping targets in both Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, including the same tau-linked protein

    How the harm spreads

    The picture that emerges is of a chemical nudging several failing systems at once rather than flipping a single switch. One route is inflammation

    The inflammation regulator the model kept flagging, NFKB1, sits near the center of the brain’s immune response. When it stays switched on, it feeds the low-grade neuroinflammation that shadows Alzheimer’s

    That gene drew extra attention for another reason. Using a statistical method that tests whether a gene’s activity helps cause a disease rather than simply riding along with it

    The team found that higher NFKB1 activity in brain tissue tracked with higher Alzheimer’s risk

    Two more pathways

    A second route runs through oxidative stress, the slow chemical wear that builds up when cells make more reactive oxygen than they can mop up

    The brain burns unusually large amounts of energy, which leaves it exposed to this kind of damage. Separate research has already shown 6PPD-quinone driving the same oxidative damage in human cells

    The third route is about signaling. GSK3B, the protein that adds the knots to tau, is a long-standing suspect in Alzheimer’s. Those tangles clog dying neurons

    Another flagged gene sits in a pathway that keeps synapses working – the junctions where neurons pass messages along

    Disturb these systems together, the authors argue. The harm lands exactly where brain cells most need to stay in contact

    Connecting tire pollution to Alzheimer’s

    None of this proves a daily commute raises anyone’s odds of dementia

    Still, this study offers the first molecular map tying this tire pollutant to Alzheimer’s genes – built from human brain data, not fish or mice

    The evidence has real gaps. One of the brain datasets included only a dozen Alzheimer’s cases

    And every binding result the researchers report exists so far only inside a computer simulation, not confirmed in the tissue of a living brain

    A modifiable risk factor

    Still, the map hands laboratories a short list of genes and mechanisms to test directly. It also pushes tire-wear pollution into the conversation – a common, nearly invisible exposure

    That question carries real weight. The World Health Organization (WHO) counts roughly 55 million people living with dementia today

    That total is expected to more than double by 2050, and Alzheimer’s accounts for most of it

    For now, 6PPD-quinone joins a growing list of everyday chemicals. Researchers are re-examining each one for what they might do to the aging brain

    The study cannot yet say how much a lifetime spent near traffic changes those odds. But it turns a vague worry about pollution into a set of named, testable targets – and that is usually where prevention research starts

    The study is published in the journal Open Medicine

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