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News from Genomics Today

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: 30 APRIL 2000 AT  19:00 ET US
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American Academy of Neurology

Promising gene therapy could rejuvenate aging brain networks.

Age-related deterioration in critical brain networks may be restored by gene therapy,
according to a study in monkeys presented at the American Academy of Neurology's
52nd Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA, April 29 -- May 6, 2000. This finding lends
support to a study just underway to treat Alzheimer's disease using a similar gene
therapy approach, say the study's authors.

Researchers from the University of California in San Diego found that normal aging
in monkeys causes a 28 percent decline in the density of certain brain networks
originating from nerve cells called neurons deep in the brain.

The scientists found that they were able to restore these connections by transplanting
brain cells genetically programmed to release a protein called "nerve growth factor."
"It would be inappropriate to suggest that this approach could be used to treat the
course of normal aging, but it is not a far stretch to suggest that this may be useful
in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease," said Mark Tuszynski, MD, PhD, a researcher
at the Center for Neural Repair at UCSD and principal author of the report. "Indeed,
we are now beginning clinical trials to determine whether nerve growth factor gene
therapy will be useful in combating Alzheimer's disease in humans."
Nerve growth factor nourishes neurons and allows brain cells to grow and maintain
fibers called axons that link neurons in one area to neurons in other areas of the brain.
In previous studies, Tuszynski's group found that the normal aging process involves
atrophy and a loss of function within a particular set of brain cells deep in the brain
known as cholinergic neurons.
These cells, which are connected by axon connections to the outer layers, or cortex,
of the brain, are believed to be critical to many of the memory and other mental
functions that deteriorate gradually and to a mild degree with age, but much more
rapidly and severely in Alzheimer's disease.
Indeed, other researchers have shown that the cholinergic neurons are particularly
hard hit by Alzheimer's disease.
Tuscynski's group measured the density of cholinergic axons in the cortex,
comparing the brains of normal aged monkeys with aged monkeys that had received
transplants of brain cells engineered to produce large amounts of nerve growth factor.
"We show that we can reverse these age-related losses of connections in the cortex by
delivering nerve growth factor to cell bodies deep within the brain," said Tuszynski.
The next steps, said Tuszynski, are to determine whether nerve growth factor gene
therapy actually improves mental function in aged monkeys and to proceed with
clinical trials to determine if this therapy is safe and effective in humans with Alzheimer's
disease.
The American Academy of Neurology, an association of more than 16,500 neurologists and
neuroscience professionals, is dedicated to improving patient care through education and
research.

For more information about the American Academy of Neurology, visit its Web site at
http://www.aan.com.
For online neurological health and wellness information, visit NeuroVista at
http://www.aan.com/neurovista.
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EDITOR'S NOTE:  Dr. Tuszynski will present the research at the American Academy of
Neurology's 52nd Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA, during a platform presentation on Sunday,
April 30, 2000, at 2:45 pm in Room 14A of the San Diego Convention Center.

Back to EurekAlert!
http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/aan-pgt042400.html
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