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New Genetic Risk Factor for Susceptibility to Alzheimer's Disease
Identified By University of Pittsburgh Researchers

PITTSBURGH, June 18 /PRNewswire/ -- Alzheimer's disease (AD)
researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have singled out a new
genetic risk factor for the debilitating brain disease that affects
4 million Americans today and will strike as many as 14 million
during the next 50 years.

In a decade-long research study following more than 300
first-degree relatives of 189 Alzheimer's patients, the Pitt researchers
identified a small area of chromosome 10 that, when combined with
the previously identified APOE E4 gene, significantly increases
a person's risk of developing the disease.

This combination of genes produced a 16-fold increase in the risk
of AD among first-degree relatives, said the researchers.

By comparison, this effect is greater than the increased risk of lung
cancer caused by smoking.

These new results are supported by independent studies of AD
patients and controls from Pittsburgh, Boston, and Bonn, Germany.

The study results were published today in the July issue of Molecular
Psychiatry (pg. 413-419).

"Our findings may provide new opportunities for designing and
evaluating treatments that prevent or delay the onset of AD,"
said George S. Zubenko, M.D., Ph.D., professor of psychiatry at the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and adjunct professor
of biological sciences at Carnegie Mellon University.

Dr. Zubenko and his colleagues studied normal individuals between
the ages of 40 and 75 who were first-degree relatives of patients with
AD.  The subjects were given standard memory evaluation tests to
be certain they had not suffered any cognitive decline prior to the
start of the study, and then blood samples were drawn to identify
genetic and biochemical risk factors for AD and related disorders.
Eighteen people developed AD after 11.5 years of regular follow-up
evaluations.  Ongoing assessments of the remainder of the group
and the continuing search for new risk factors is being supported
by research grants from the National Institutes of Health, for which
Dr. Zubenko serves as the principal investigator.

According to Dr. Zubenko, these findings may provide new molecular
targets for therapeutic drug development and will help researchers
design trials involving subjects who have the greatest likelihood of
responding to therapy and for whom successful therapy would have
the greatest impact. Furthermore, the newly discovered risk locus
affects brain levels of dopamine, the neurotransmitter used by
neurons that degenerate in Parkinson's disease.  As a result, the new
findings may have relevance for both of these common
neurodegenerative disorders.

CONTACT:  Craig Dunhoff, [log in to unmask],
or Lisa Rossi, [log in to unmask],
both of UPMC, 412-624-2607, or fax, 412-624-3184.

SOURCE  University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Web Site: http://www.upmc.edu

http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/06-18-2001/0001516506&EDATE=

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