martes, 31 de enero de 2012

Breakthroughs in Alzheimer’s disease research

In vitro Alzheimer’s cells for research

Original article : News Medical

Researchers are closer to understanding Alzheimer’s disease using a new stem cell technique. They have successfully replicated Alzheimer’s disease neurons with stem cells for the first time.

Researchers out of UC San Diego School of Medicine created in vitro models of genetic and sporadic forms of Alzheimer’s disease, using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) from patients who suffered from the neurodegenerative disorder. The neurons were purified, meaning they were separated from other types of cells, to reduce variability in the experiment. To create the neurons, the researchers extracted fibroblasts—cells from the skin—of two patients with familial Alzheimer’s, two patients with sporadic Alzheimer’s and two people with no known neurological problems. The researchers then reprogrammed the fibroblasts into stem cells, which then differentiated into working neurons.

“Creating highly purified and functional human Alzheimer's neurons in a dish – this has never been done before,” said senior study author Dr. Lawrence Goldstein, distinguished professor in the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator and director of the UC San Diego Stem Cell Program, in a press release.

The iPSC-derived neurons from Alzheimer’s patients exhibited normal cell activity, formed functional synaptic contacts and – most importantly – displayed indicators of Alzheimer’s disease, such as elevated production of beta-amyloid proteins and abnormal activation of the protein kinase GSK-3. Goldstein added the models aren’t “perfect” – they’re merely the first step. However, the research proves creating isolated Alzheimer’s neurons can be done and provides a blueprint for how to do so.

“Additional features of the model need to be developed,” Goldstein told FoxNews.com. “At this point, it’s purified neurons. So now, knowing what the purified neurons do, we want to add back defined qualities of other cells – like astrocytes. Astrocytes are normally a very important part of how neurons function, and they also play a role in resistance or susceptibility to disease.” “We don’t know what that role is yet, but we can start to piece that back together by mixing the astrocytes back in with the neurons,” he added.

The neurons may prove to be a crucial tool for studying the causes of Alzheimer’s, as well as developing and testing drugs to treat the disease. “We're dealing with the human brain. You can't just do a biopsy on living patients,” Goldstein explained. “Instead, researchers have had to work around, mimicking some aspects of the disease in non-neuronal human cells or using limited animal models. Neither approach is really satisfactory.” Now with this new technique with in vitro neurons, the researchers more deeply investigate the onset of Alzheimer’s disease and observe the initial processes that lead to the destruction of brain cells.

Currently, dementia research is mostly centered around studies of post-mortem tissues. “The way to think about it is, if you want to understand what goes wrong early – if you only get post-mortem tissue, a lot of the damage is already done,” Goldstein said. “Suppose you work for the NTSB and you have to study a plane crash,” he explained. “You can get a lot of information about the crash from the wreckage, but the black box tells you what went wrong early. That’s incredibly important information for preventing crashes. We’re looking for the black box of Alzheimer’s.”

He added that “we show that one of the early changes in Alzheimer's neurons thought to be an initiating event in the course of the disease turns out not to be that significant… What we observed is, it was not the beta-amyloid fragments causing biochemical abnormalities, but it was a pre-cursor to that, called beta-CTS.”

According to Goldstein, the next step for using this research would be to begin testing drugs and scaling up the technology to test more patients. “From the standpoint of drug development, here’s the core problem: we don’t have any drugs so we don’t exactly know what it’s going to take to develop them,” Goldstein said, “We think by having true human neurons to work with we can increase the speed and likelihood of finding effective drugs.”

Goldstein said continuing to research Alzheimer’s disease is critical in order to reduce the economical and emotional toll the disease takes on the nation. “People make this interesting mistake where they say it’s just a disease of the elderly – and who cares?” Goldstein said. “The truth is, a 70 year-old person who doesn’t have the disease can be very productive economically and socially, while those who have the disease can be a drain in terms of cost of care. Projections are that the cost of Alzheimer’s will go into the trillions. It’s a real substantial impact.”

The study was published Wednesday in the online version of the journal Nature.


In another development a team of researchers led by Domenico Pratico, professor of pharmacology and microbiology and immunology at Temple, discovered the presence of the protein, called 12/15-Lipoxygenase, in the brain three years ago.

“We found this protein to be very active in the brains of people who have Alzheimer's disease,” said Pratico. “But three years ago, we didn't know the role it played in the development of the disease.”

After two years of further study the Temple researchers have found that the protein is at the top of a pathway and controls a biochemical chain reaction that begins the development of Alzheimer's. They have published their findings in the journal Annals of Neurology.

Pratico explained that their research has shown that 12/15-Lipoxygenase controls Beta secretase (BACE-1), an enzyme that is key to the development of amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's patients. “For reasons we don't yet know, in some people, 12/15-Lipoxygenase starts to work too much…By working too much, it sends the wrong message to the Beta secretase, which in turn starts to produce more amyloid Beta. This initially results in cognitive impairment, memory impairment and, later, an increase of amyloid plaque.”

BACE-1 has long been a biological target for researchers seeking to create a drug against Alzheimer's disease, said Pratico. But because little has been known about how it functions, they have been unsuccessful developing a molecule that could reach the brain and block it. “We now know much better how Beta secretase works because we have found that the 12/15-Lipoxygenase protein is a controller of BACE functions…You don't need to target the Beta secretase directly because the 12/15-Lipoxygenase is really the system in the brain that tells BACE to work more or work less.”

Pratico said that they have validated 12/15-Lipoxygenase as a target for a potential Alzheimer drug or therapy. “By modulating BACE levels and activity through controlling the 12/15-Lipoxygenase, we can potentially improve the cognitive part of the phenotype of the disease, and prevent the accumulation of amyloid beta inside the neurons, which will eventually translate into less of those plaques…This is a totally new mechanism for controlling BACE.”

Pratico said his group has looked at an experimental compound that blocks 12/15-Lipoxygenase function as a potential therapy to inhibit BACE function in the brain. In their lab, using animal models, they saw the drug's ability to restore some cognitive function, as well as improve learning and memory ability. “There is an opportunity here to study this molecule and develop an even stronger molecule to target 12/15-Lipoxygenase function in the brain,” he said.


Original article : News Medical

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