Dear
All,
First
off, please know that this information is not about marijuana or drug
abuse, but I think after reading it you will appreciate its
significance and importance.
The
Stanford University School of Medicine is doing wonderful work to understand
and treat debilitating and insidious diseases that do great harm to many
humans; including “cancer and Alzheimer's”.
Approximately
a year ago, Stanford published an article regarding a human protein (CD 47)
that was able to kill “all” cancers (in mice) including breast, brain, lung,
and other forms.
Stanford
School of Medicine Cancer Study - Article: “Cancer Drug Kills Every Kind of Tumor: Study” –
Thursday, March 28, 2013.
Their
hope is that their CD 47 work (Stanford School of Medicine) will be the “Holy
Grail” to kill all cancers.
My
hope is that their work will soon eliminate all cancers in our lifetime not
only for adults but especially for our young children.
Now
we see that Stanford is getting close to understanding how to possibly
eliminate another insidious disease that mostly affects those who are in their
senior years of life.
These
are exciting times!
Ronald
L. Kirkish, CDFC/IFBC/CALM
Alzheimer's Game Changer: Scientists Find
That Changing One Molecule Reverses Memory Loss
Brain cells called microglia chew up toxic substances and cell
debris, calm inflammation and make nerve-cell-nurturing substances.
By Bruce Goldman/Stanford News Service
The mass die-off of nerve cells in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease may largely occur because an entirely different class of brain cells, called microglia, begin to fall down on the job, according to a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
(Stanford Medicine article: Blocking receptor in brain’s immune cells counters Alzheimer’s in mice, study finds)
The study, published online
Dec. 8 in The Journal of Clinical Investigation, illustrates the importance of microglia and could lead to new ways of warding off the onset of
Alzheimer’s disease, which is predicted to afflict 15 million people by
mid-century
unless some form of cure or prevention is found.
The study also may help explain an intriguing association between aspirin and reduced rates of Alzheimer’s.
The study also may help explain an intriguing association between aspirin and reduced rates of Alzheimer’s.
Microglia, which constitute
about 10-15 percent of all the cells in the brain, actually resemble immune
cells considerably more than they do nerve cells.
“Microglia are the brain’s
beat cops,” said Katrin
Andreasson, MD, professor of neurology and neurological sciences and
the study’s senior author.
“Our experiments show that
keeping them on the right track counters memory loss and preserves healthy brain
physiology.”
Implicated: a single
molecule
A microglial cell serves as
a front-line sentry, monitoring its surroundings for suspicious activities and
materials by probing its local environment.
If it spots trouble, it releases substances that recruit other
microglia to the scene, said Andreasson.
Microglia are tough cops, protecting the brain
against invading bacteria and viruses by gobbling them up.
They are adept at calming
things down, too, clamping
down on inflammation if it gets out of hand.
They also work as garbage
collectors, chewing up dead cells and molecular debris strewn among living
cells — including clusters of a protein called A-beta, notorious for aggregating
into gummy deposits called Alzheimer’s plaques, the disease’s hallmark
anatomical feature.
A-beta, produced throughout
the body, is as natural as it is ubiquitous.
But when it clumps into
soluble clusters consisting of a few molecules, it’s highly toxic to nerve
cells.
These clusters are believed
to play a substantial role in causing Alzheimer’s.
“The microglia are supposed
to be, from the get-go, constantly clearing A-beta, as well as keeping a lid
on inflammation,” Andreasson said. “If they lose their ability to function,
things get out of control. A-beta builds up in the brain, inducing toxic
inflammation.”
The Stanford study provides
strong evidence that this deterioration in microglial function is driven, in
large part, by the heightened signaling activity of a single molecule that sits on the surface
of microglial and nerve cells. Previous work in Andreasson’s lab and other labs
has shown that this molecule, a receptor protein called EP2, has a strong potential to
cause inflammation when activated by binding to a substance called prostaglandin E2,
or PGE2.
“We’d previously observed
that if we bioengineered
mice so their brain cells lacked this receptor, there was a huge reduction in inflammatory
activity in the brain,” she said.
But they didn’t know
whether nerve cells or microglia were responsible for that inflammatory
activity, or what its precise consequences were.
So they determined to find
out.
Blocking receptor preserves
memory
The experiments began in a
dish.
Isolating viable microglia
from the brain is quite difficult.
But it’s easy to harvest
large numbers of their close cousins, immune cells called macrophages.
These cells circulate
throughout the body and can be readily obtained from a blood sample.
While not carbon copies of
one another, microglia
and macrophages
share numerous genetic, biochemical and behavioral features.
When placed in a dish with
soluble A-beta clusters, macrophages drawn from young mice responded calmly,
producing recruiting chemicals and not ramping up production of inflammatory
molecules.
Notably, the output of
A-beta-chewing enzymes in these young cells was robust.
But macrophages from older mice
acted differently: A-beta’s presence incited a big increase in EP2 activity in
these cells, resulting in amped-up output of inflammatory molecules and reduced
generation of recruiting chemicals and A-beta-digesting enzymes.
This early hint that
age-related changes in EP2 action in microglia might be promoting some of the
neuropathological features implicated in Alzheimer’s was borne out in
subsequent experiments for which Andreasson’s team used mice genetically
predisposed to get the mouse equivalent of Alzheimer’s, as well as otherwise
normal mice into whose brains the scientists injected either A-beta or a
control solution.
In both groups of mice, the
expected deleterious effects on memory and learning didn’t arise if EP2 within
microglial cells was absent, as a result of a genetic manipulation.
Blocking microglial EP2
activity significantly improved these animals’ performance on two kinds of standard
memory tests: one that assesses how quickly a mouse forgets that it has
encountered an object before, and another that rates the mouse’s ability to
remember where a food reward is in a maze.
Looking beyond aspirin
Clearly, knocking out EP2
action in A-beta-provoked microglia benefited memory in mice that had either gradually
(the “Alzheimer’s” mice) or suddenly (the brain-injected mice) acquired excessive A-beta in their
brains.
Likewise, mouse microglia
bioengineered to lack EP2 vastly outperformed unaltered microglia, in
A-beta-challenged brains, at such critical tasks as secreting recruiting
chemicals and factors beneficial to nerve cells and in producing
inflammation-countering, rather than inflammation-spurring, proteins.
Epidemiological reports
suggest that the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as aspirin, can
prevent the onset of Alzheimer’s — although only if their use is initiated
well before any signs of the disorder begin to show up in older people,
Andreasson said.
“Once you have any whiff of
memory loss, these drugs have no effect,” she said.
NSAIDs’ mainly act by
blocking two enzymes called COX-1 and COX-2; these enzymes create a molecule
that can be converted to several different substances, including PGE2 — the
hormone-like chemical that triggers EP2 action.
Although PGE2 is known to
regulate inflammatory changes in the brain, it exercises diverse, useful
functions in different tissues throughout the body, from influencing blood
pressure to inducing labor.
Complicating matters, PGE2
is just one of five different prostaglandins originating from the precursor
molecule produced by COX-1 and COX-2.
So aspirin and other COX-1- and
COX-2-inhibiting drugs may have myriad effects, not all of them
beneficial.
It may turn out that a
compound blocking
only EP2 activity on microglial cells, or some downstream consequences within
microglial cells, would be better-suited for fending off Alzheimer’s without
side effects,
said Andreasson.
Meanwhile, her group is
exploring the biological mechanisms via which PE2 signaling pushes microglia
over to the dark side.
Former Stanford
postdoctoral scholar Jenny Johansson, PhD, is the lead author of the study.
Other Stanford co-authors
are former graduate student Nathan Woodling, PhD; postdoctoral scholars Siddhita
Mhartre, PhD, and Holden Brown, PhD; research
associate Xibin Liang, MD, PhD; life-science research assistants Qian Wang and
Maharshi Panchal; and undergraduate Taylor Loui.
The study was supported by
the National Institutes for Health (grants RO1AG030209,
R21AG033914 and NRSA F31AG039195), the Alzheimer’s
Association, the Swedish
Research Council and the National
Science Foundation.
Information about
Stanford’s Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, which also
supported the work, is available at http://www.neurology.stanford.edu.
No comments:
Post a Comment