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Severe Alzheimer’s Reversed in Mice through Gene
Therapy
Sept. 21, 2005 - In mice, that had been genetically
engineered to develop Alzheimer's disease, scientists were able to
dramatically reverse the rodents' severe memory loss by reducing the
amount of an enzyme that is crucial for the development of Alzheimer's
disease.
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"What we are showing is a proof of principle that
stopping the synthesis of a protein that is necessary for the formation
of the telltale plaques reverses the progression of the disease, and
more importantly, the cognitive function of these mice, which had
already been impaired, has now recovered," says Inder Verma, professor
in the Laboratory for Genetics at the Salk Institute for Biological
Studies.
The findings, which are the result of a close
collaboration between researchers at the Salk Institute and scientists
at the University of California in San Diego, are reported in an advance
on-line publication of Nature Neuroscience.
In the past, gene therapy has been mainly used to
deliver normal genes into cells to compensate for defective versions of
the gene causing disease. In their study, the researchers used gene
therapy to silence a normally functioning gene. Exploiting a mechanism
called RNA interference, they were able to turn down the gene that helps
produce the characteristic amyloid plaques that are one of the hallmarks
of Alzheimer's disease.
"Within a month of treatment, mice that had already
suffered memory deficits could learn and remember how to find their way
through a water maze," says co-author Robert Marr, a post-doctoral
researcher in Verma's lab.
"It appears that these mice can come back from a
very severe level of disease progression," adds first author Oded
Singer, also at the Salk. "This is a very important finding because
humans are usually diagnosed when the disease has already progressed
relatively far."
But he warns that it is too early to make direct
comparisons with the human disease, since mice ordinarily don't develop
the symptoms of the disease unless they are genetically engineered to do
so.
Amyloid plaques, which are insoluble protein clumps in the brain, can
precede the onset of dementia by many years. These plaques are formed
when enzymes cleave the amyloid precursor protein (APP) releasing the
toxic beta amyloid fragments that clump together to form the sticky
plaques. One of the enzymes doing the cleaving is called beta secretase
or BACE1.
And although the production of beta amyloid occurs
in all brains, healthy brains are able to clear away excess amounts.
Brains of people with Alzheimer's disease, on the other hand, are unable
to control beta amyloid accumulation.
For several years now, drug companies have been
trying to find a drug that inhibits BACE1 and thus prevent beta amyloid
from building up in brains of people with Alzheimer's disease. But so
far, the goal has remained elusive.
Instead of looking for chemical compounds to
inhibit BACE1, Oded Singer, collaborating with the laboratories of Fred
H. Gage at the Salk Institute and lead author Eliezer Masliah at UCSD,
resorted to small biological molecules, called short interfering RNA, or
siRNA, which derail the process of translating genes into proteins. They
work like a dimmer switch, reducing the amount of available gene
product, in this case the enzyme BACE1.
A modified lentivirus, which has been developed in
Verma's lab, delivered the siRNAs into the brain cells of the transgenic
mice that were producing vast amounts of human beta-amyloid and whose
brains where littered with plaques.
"When you compare the brains of treated and
untreated mice, the difference is striking. Silencing BACE1 reduced the
number and size of plaques by two thirds within a month, which is
incredibly fast," says Singer.
Co-authors of this work also include Edward
Rockenstein and Leslie Crews, both at UCSD.
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.
About the Salk Institute
The Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La
Jolla, California, is an independent nonprofit organization dedicated to
fundamental discoveries in the life sciences, the improvement of human
health and the training of future generations of researchers. Jonas
Salk, M.D., whose polio vaccine all but eradicated the crippling disease
poliomyelitis in 1955, opened the Institute in 1965 with a gift of land
from the City of San Diego and the financial support of the March of
Dimes.
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