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MEDIA CONTACT: Elizabeth
Crown at (312) 503-8928 or at e-crown@northwestern.edu
January 6, 2004
Gene Technique Targets Alzheimer’s Memory Loss
CHICAGO --- Northwestern University researchers have prevented learning
and memory deficits in a model of Alzheimer’s disease using
a gene-targeting approach to block production of beta-amyloid, or “senile,” plaques,
one of the hallmarks of the disease.
Alzheimer’s disease is
a neurodegenerative condition affecting over 15 million people worldwide
that causes memory loss and, ultimately, dementia. Some
research suggests that Alzheimer’s disease is caused by an increased amyloid
burden in the brain -- the so-called amyloid cascade hypothesis.
Results of the Northwestern study, published in the January issue
of the journal Neuron, provide compelling evidence for the therapeutic
potential of inhibiting
an enzyme, beta-secretase (BACE1),
required for the production of beta-amyloid, to treat memory impairment in
patients with Alzheimer’s disease.
The study also presents new evidence that beta-amyloid is directly responsible
for causing the memory-robbing effects of Alzheimer’s disease, said Masuo
Ohno, research assistant professor of physiology, Feinberg School of Medicine
at Northwestern University.
Ohno’s co-researchers on the project were John F. Disterhoft, professor
of physiology, and Robert Vassar, associate professor of cell and molecular biology
at the Feinberg School.
Ohno and colleagues used behavioral, biochemical and electrophysiologic methods
to analyze BACE1 in mice bred to lack the enzyme but to also overproduce amyloid
precursor protein, which BACE1 “clips” into fragments of beta-amyloid
that eventually form the notorious plaques associated with Alzheimer’s
disease.
The mice were healthy and had no serious neurological abnormalities, suggesting
that BACE1 inhibition is a rational strategy for treating Alzheimer’s disease,
Ohno said.
Importantly, the beneficial effects of BACE1 inhibition in the mice were seen
well before beta-amyloid plaques formed, indicating that the soluble forms
of the protein can disrupt learning and memory in early stages of the disease
process.
“Potential compounds that block BACE1 should be useful in counteracting
the Alzheimer’s disease process. We clearly show for the first time that
genetic reduction of brain beta-amyloid levels prevents memory deficits and brain
cell functional abnormalities in a laboratory model of Alzheimer’s disease,” Ohno
said.
“This well-executed study in mice is another step forward toward demonstrating
the validity of anti-amyloid interventions in Alzheimer’s disease. The
next step is to see if this works in more sophisticated models of the disease,
and eventually in humans. ” said William Thies, vice president of medical
and scientific affairs for the Alzheimer’s Association, which funded part
of the study.
The National Institutes of Health also funded the study.
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