| [audio:
Bill Klein on "Alzheimer's Mystery Solved"]
MEDIA CONTACT: Megan
Fellman at (847) 491-3115 or fellman@northwestern.edu
August 19, 2003
Protein May Be Factor in Alzheimer’s Disease

Memory-building synapses of a brain
cell under attack by ADDLs (shown in yellow). ADDLs are toxic
proteins that could explain
Alzheimer’s disease. |
EVANSTON, Ill. — Researchers at Northwestern University have
discovered for the first time in humans the presence of a toxic protein
that they believe to be responsible for the devastating memory loss
found in individuals suffering from Alzheimer’s disease.
An understanding of this key molecular link in the progression of Alzheimer’s
could lead to the development of new therapeutic drugs capable of reversing memory
loss in patients who are treated early, in addition to preventing or delaying
the disease. Help for individuals with pre-Alzheimer’s memory failure (mild
cognitive impairment) also is envisioned. The findings are published online by
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The research team, led by William L. Klein, professor of neurobiology and physiology,
found up to 70 times more small, soluble aggregated proteins called “amyloid
_-derived diffusible ligands” (ADDLs, pronounced “addles”)
in the brain tissue of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease compared to
that of normal individuals.
The clinical data strongly support a recent theory in which ADDLs accumulate
at the beginning of Alzheimer’s disease and block memory function by a
process predicted to be reversible. ADDLs have the ability to attack the memory-building
activity of synapses, points of communication where neurons exchange information,
without killing neurons.
“Researchers for more than a decade thought it was big molecules, the ‘amyloid
fibrils,’ that caused memory problems, but we think the real culprits are
extremely small molecules, what we call ADDLs,” said Klein, who is a member
of Northwestern’s Cognitive Neurology and Alzheimer’s Disease Center. “Now
we’ve shown that ADDLs are present in humans and are a clinically valid
part of Alzheimer’s pathology. If we can develop drugs that target and
neutralize these neurotoxins, it might be possible to not only slow down memory
loss, but to actually reverse it, to bring memory function back to normal.”
Although both are a form of amyloid beta, ADDLs and their properties differ significantly
from the amyloid fibrils (known as plaques) that are a diagnostic hallmark of
Alzheimer’s. ADDLs found in human brains, mostly 12 or 24 amyloid beta
proteins clumped together, are tiny and undetectable in conventional neuropathology;
fibrils are much, much larger. While fibrils are immobile toxic waste dumps,
ADDLs are soluble and diffuse between brain cells until they find vulnerable
synapses. (Single pieces of amyloid beta protein in the brain is normal.)
“The difference between ADDLs and fibrils is like comparing four eggs,
over easy, to an enormous omelet that could feed the entire Chicago Bears team,” said
Klein. ““You start with eggs, but the final product taste, texture
and size are all different.”
The existence of ADDLs may help explain the poor correlation between plaques
and neurological deficits. Studies by other researchers have shown a reversal
of memory failure in mouse models treated with amyloid beta antibodies — but
without any reduction in plaque. The antibodies appear to restore memory because
they neutralize ADDLs, which Klein’s group has found in mouse models with
Alzheimer’s as well as in human brains with Alzheimer’s.
Klein’s research team recently began a study funded by the National Institutes
of Health to continue investigating ADDLs in humans and further characterize
these molecules. In addition to Alzheimer’s disease, ADDL-like molecules
could be the cause of other degenerative diseases.
Klein also is working with researchers at Northwestern’s Institute for
Nanotechnology on clinical diagnostics capable of detecting ADDLs in blood or
cerebral spinal fluid. Currently diagnosis of Alzheimer’s is based primarily
on a battery of psychological tests.
“Now that ADDLs have been discovered in humans we would like to develop
effective diagnostics and that means employing nanotechnology,” said Klein. “That’s
because ADDLs are present in very low concentrations, and nanotechnology has
the potential to provide the ultra-sensitive assays needed for the clinic.”
Klein, Grant A. Krafft, formerly at Northwestern University's Feinberg School
of Medicine and now chief scientific officer at Acumen Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., and
Caleb
E. Finch,
professor of biological sciences and gerontology at the University of Southern
California, reported the discovery of ADDLs in 1998. Krafft and Finch are co-authors
on the PNAS paper. Northwestern and USC hold joint patents on the composition
and use of ADDLs in neurodisorders.
The patent rights have been licensed to Acumen Pharmaceuticals, based in Glenview,
Ill., for the development of drugs that treat Alzheimer’s disease and other
memory-related disorders. Clinical trials could be two or three years away.
In addition to Klein, Krafft and Finch, other authors on the paper are Yuesong
Gong (lead author), Lei Chang, Kirsten L. Viola, Pascale N. Lacor and Mary P.
Lambert, from Northwestern University.
The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Boothroyd,
Feiger and French foundations, and the Institute for the Study of Aging.
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