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Battle Against Memory Loss in Seniors Gets New
Funding
Initiative calls for innovative, high-payoff ideas to
solve age-related memory loss
Nov. 30, 2005 The battle against memory loss by
senior citizens just received reinforcements from a former nurse and
wife of the late chairman of 3M company who wants to know why memory
fades as we age. The Evelyn F. and William L. McKnight Brain Institute
has awarded $375,000 to spur more research.
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...it is possible that some older
people actually lack the attention span to log new information
into their memory.
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Three University of Florida scientists will receive
$125,000 each for innovative projects to fight memory loss in older
adults, MBI Executive Director Dennis Steindler, Ph.D., has announced.
"This initiative called for innovative and
high-payoff ideas to solve age-related memory loss," Steindler said. "We
wanted out-of-the-box, state-of-the-art approaches, rooted in cellular,
genetic, molecular and behavioral neuroscience."
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Grant awardees aim to create a brain-scanning
method to test drug treatments, to solve the mysteries of how brain
cells age, and to develop neuroprotective drugs.
The projects further the mission of the late
William L. McKnight, who served 59 years as chairman of 3M company, and
his wife Evelyn F. McKnight, a former nurse who was deeply interested in
why memory often fades as people age.
The Brain Institute was named for the McKnights in
May 2000, after the McKnight Brain Research Foundation board of trustees
gifted UF with $15 million to support aggressive research.
Awardees include David Loring, Ph.D., a neurology
professor in the College of Medicine; Leonid Moroz, Ph.D., an associate
professor of neuroscience and zoology at UF's Whitney Laboratory for
Marine Bioscience; and Hendrik Luesch, Ph.D., an assistant professor and
medicinal chemist in the College of Pharmacy.
Loring wants to test the effectiveness of
memory-loss therapies by applying a new statistical technique to a
standard brain-scanning method called functional Magnetic Resonance
Imaging, known as fMRI.
Traditional thought holds that when older people
lose the ability to bank new memories, it may be because of
deterioration in the brain's temporal lobe.
But Loring believes it is possible that some older
people actually lack the attention span to log new information into
their memory, which places the problem in the prefrontal cortex - the
brain's attention center - not the temporal lobe.
He will work with Kimford Meador, M.D., a professor
of neurology and director of the epilepsy and clinical Alzheimer's
programs, and Frank Bova, Ph.D., a physicist and professor of
neurosurgery, to use new fMRI techniques to literally "watch" activity
inside the brains of human volunteers as they respond to memory-related
tasks.
While Loring and colleagues hope to pinpoint the
regions of the brain that contribute to successful memory formation and
develop a technique to test the effectiveness of drugs used to fight
memory loss, Moroz is attempting to determine why some brain cells age
more quickly than others.
Answers may come from the inconspicuous sea slug
Aplysia californica. This ocean creature has the largest neurons in the
animal kingdom, creating a simple memory-forming network that is easily
studied.
Analyzing the biochemical products that result when
the genes of Aplysia neurons express themselves may reveal markers for
human memory function and provide information regarding a neuron's "life
span." Moroz wants to know how neuron longevity affects memory and why
specific neurons age at different rates.
"We have all the tools in our hands; the problem is
combining the right people with the right cells to answer the question
of what kind of genes contribute to long-term memory formation," Moroz
explained. "Nobody really understands on the level of specific cells how
many genes work together. We are excited because this is the first time
we will be able to monitor all genes in specific neurons."
Results from Moroz's research could mean new drugs
to target specific cells in the brains of those suffering from
age-related memory loss.
"We want to know, do different neurons learn
differently, and if they do, do they age differently? Put these puzzle
pieces together and you can put together new therapies," Moroz said.
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Maybe
Senior Memories Not That Bad
Jan. 2006 - A new study by Ipsos
Insight says those past retirement age are better at
identifying brand names than younger Americans, despite
the marketing focus on Baby Boomers. |
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Meanwhile, Luesch, a medicinal chemist, seeks to
identify proteins that can be modulated by drugs to activate protective
genes to prevent neurological age-related disorders.
Collaborating with Alfred Lewin, Ph.D., a professor
of molecular genetics and microbiology with the UF College of Medicine,
and researchers at Scripps Florida, Luesch will screen genomewide
libraries of DNA to find genes that regulate the synthesis of
neuroprotective enzymes - proteins that cause or speed up chemical
reactions.
Initial screenings will be conducted with
researchers at Scripps Florida, followed by detailed studies at UF. The
award will allow Luesch to hire a postdoctoral researcher and to acquire
instruments for more efficient analysis and gene validation.
"The McKnight Foundation grant will further the
opportunity for collaboration with Scripps Florida and among colleges at
the University of Florida," Luesch said.
Strengthening research alliances is an important
aspect of the McKnight grants, Steindler said.
"The grants allow us to advance the science being
done in this institute through collaborations with investigators around
the world," Steindler said. "It's important work. As we age, our memory
is at risk. If we can devise novel interventions or enhance memory
capabilities during the aging process, all of us will benefit."
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