Print

Print


New Alzheimer's vaccine shows promise, doctors say

(December 20, 2000 2:23 p.m. EST http://www.nandotimes.com) - Taking what
could be an important step toward preventing Alzheimer's, scientists found
that an experimental vaccine can largely ward off memory loss in mice with
a similar disease.

The vaccine is already being tested in people.

"This potentially could be a major breakthrough for us," said Zaven
Khachaturian, senior science adviser to the Alzheimer's Association.

But he stressed that treatments that work in mice do not necessarily help
people and that the mouse research did not deal with some key mental
abilities lost in Alzheimer's, such as language and judgment.

The vaccine made headlines last year when scientists reported that it
largely blocks the formation of protein deposits called amyloid plaques in
the brains of mice. Such plaques are a hallmark of Alzheimer's.

But the next step was to find whether the vaccine makes any difference in
the animals' mental functioning.

Two studies published in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature found that
the vaccine does indeed make a difference.

The research was conducted by two independent research teams, centered at
the University of South Florida in Tampa and the University of Toronto in
Ontario, Canada.

The studies used strains of mice that develop lots of amyloid plaques in
their brains, along with measurable memory deficits, because of the genes
they carry.

The researchers used different versions of a procedure in which mice swam
until they learned the location of an underwater platform. The animals were
then tested to see how well they remembered where the platform was.
Alzheimer's patients frequently have trouble remembering locations and how
to get to destinations.

Both studies found that mice that had been repeatedly vaccinated performed
markedly better than the untreated plaque-forming mice in the memory tests.
On some occasions they did as well or nearly as well as ordinary mice.

University of South Florida researcher Dave Morgan said his vaccinated mice
were slower to learn the platform location but eventually remembered it as
well as ordinary mice did.

This past July, drug company scientists announced that preliminary results
in human patients indicated the vaccine was safe. Those tests were not
designed to assess any effect on symptoms.

Human tests are continuing under the sponsorship of Elan Corp. of Dublin,
Ireland, and American Home Products Corp. of Madison, N.J. Neither company
paid for the new mouse studies.

The researchers who carried out the mouse studies said it is not clear why
the vaccine protects memory. For one thing, the research does not settle
the question of whether the plaques actually cause the symptoms of
Alzheimer's.

The vaccine was designed to make the mouse immune system attack
amyloid-beta peptide, also called beta amyloid, a key component of the
brain plaques in Alzheimer's. And both studies found that vaccinated mice
had fewer and smaller amyloid plaques in their brains.

But Morgan noted that his treated mice still had a lot of plaques.

He and Peter St George-Hyslop, one of the University of Toronto
researchers, suggested the vaccine might act on a harmful form of
amyloid-beta peptide outside of the plaques.


By MALCOLM RITTER, Associated Press
Copyright 2000 Nando Media
http://www.nandotimes.com/noframes/story/0,2107,500292053-500463267-50308845
7-0,00.html

janet paterson, an akinetic rigid subtype parkie
53 now /44 dx cd / 43 onset cd /41 dx pd / 37 onset pd
TEL: 613 256 8340 SMAIL: POBox 171 Almonte Ontario K0A 1A0 Canada
EMAIL: [log in to unmask] URL: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/