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Alzheimer's Trigger Discovery Could Lead to New
Therapies
Clearance of beta
amyloid accumulation within neurons stops memory decline in mice
March 2, 2005 -
Researchers at UC Irvine have identified a trigger
at the molecular level that marks the onset of memory decline in mice
genetically engineered to develop brain lesions in the form of plaques
and tangles associated with Alzheimer's disease.
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The trigger is a protein called "beta amyloid" that
accumulates within neurons in the mice's brains. Although several
researchers have studied the association between beta amyloid and
memory, the UCI research team is the first to identify that early beta
amyloid accumulation within neurons is the trigger for the onset of
memory decline in Alzheimer's.
"This finding has important and useful implications
for the pharmaceutical industry in terms of developing drugs that can
target beta amyloid as soon as it accumulates within the neurons," said
Frank LaFerla, principal investigator of the research project, associate
professor of neurobiology and behavior, and co-director of the UCI
Institute for Brain Aging and Dementia. "Once the plaques and tangles
form, it is too late."
The researchers report their findings in the March
3 issue of Neuron.
Although the production of beta amyloid occurs in
all brains, healthy brains are able to clear away excess amounts. Brains
with Alzheimer's disease, on the other hand, are unable to control beta
amyloid accumulation. In monitoring the mice from birth until six
months, the researchers found that the mice had no Alzheimer's disease
symptoms at two months of age.
At four months, however, the mice showed
a decline in their long-term memory retention that the researchers found
occurred in combination with the buildup of beta amyloid in neurons of
the hippocampus, amygdala and cerebral cortex regions of the mice's
brains.
While the hippocampus is thought to play a key role
in learning and memory formation, the amygdala is involved in computing
the emotional significance of events. The cerebral cortex the outer
portion of the brain is where thought processes occur.
"It's significant that the plaques and tangles did
not show up in our mice at the four-month stage," said Lauren M.
Billings, a postdoctoral researcher in the UCI School of Biological
Sciences' Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, and the first author
of the study.
"It suggests strongly that these hallmarks of Alzheimer's
disease contribute to cognitive decline only later and that the intraneuronal beta amyloid is the molecular trigger for the onset of
this insidious disease."
Billings explained the mice were making more beta
amyloid than their brains could clear naturally. When the researchers
cleared away the beta amyloid within the neurons, however, they were
able to correct the memory impairments in the mice. Moreover, the
researchers found that a reemergence of beta amyloid inside the neurons
in the mice marked again the onset of memory problems.
In their study, the researchers used mice that were
genetically engineered to develop Alzheimer's disease, a necessary step
in the research since mice ordinarily do not develop symptoms of the
disease. The molecular and cellular changes that trigger the onset of
memory decline in the human brain with Alzheimer's disease are currently
unknown and constitute a difficult problem to address. Hence,
researchers turn to animal models, such as mice.
The UCI researchers studied 270 mice from birth
until six months. They placed the mice in a water maze set in a water
tank where the mice were encouraged repeatedly to locate a hidden
platform in the tank by making spatial associations in the room to
facilitate their search.
After the platform was removed, the researchers
monitored in subsequent trials how fast the mice swam to where the
platform used to be an indication of how well the mice remembered the
platform's location. At four months of age, the mice developed memory
problems together with beta amyloid accumulation in their brain's
neurons.
Alzheimer's disease is a progressive
neurodegenerative disorder and the most common cause of dementia among
the elderly in the United States, affecting 4.5-5 million adults 10
times more than those affected by Parkinson's disease. Starting with
mild memory problems and ending with severe brain damage, Alzheimer's
usually begins after the age of 60, the risk increasing with age. If no
effective therapies are developed, by 2050 it is estimated that 13
million Americans will have the disease. In the United States, five
percent of the population over age 65 and one-third of the population
over age 85 are afflicted by it. It is the third most expensive disease
to treat and is the third leading cause of death, trailing cancer and
coronary heart disease.
Besides LaFerla and Billings, other co-authors of
the Neuron paper are Salvatore Oddo, Kim N. Green and James L. McGaugh
all researchers in the Department of Neurobiology and Behavior. The
research was funded by grants from the National Institute on Aging and
the Alzheimer's Association, as well as a National Research Service
Awards postdoctoral fellowship.
About the University of California, Irvine: The
University of California, Irvine is a top-ranked public university
dedicated to research, scholarship and community service. Founded in
1965, UCI is among the fastest-growing University of California
campuses, with more than 24,000 undergraduate and graduate students and
about 1,400 faculty members. The second-largest employer in dynamic
Orange County, UCI contributes an annual economic impact of $3 billion.
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