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Alzheimer's research seeks out lizards

Friday, 5 April, 2002, 23:12 GMT 00:12 UK -- The Gila monster could help
Alzheimer's patients A substance found in the saliva of a venomous lizard
could provide a treatment for Alzheimer's disease, scientists believe.

An experimental drug has been developed from the Gila monster's saliva to
improve memory and learning.

The New York-based biotechnology company Axonyx Inc., which has developed
the drug, Gilatide, hopes to use it in human trials later this year.

The Gila monster's bite can be deadly, but its saliva contains a chemical
which acts on a previously unknown receptor pathway in the brain that
affects memory. The animal is native to the southwest United States and
Mexico.

The Alzheimer's Society has welcomed the development, although it has
cautioned that any drug breakthrough could be a long way off. The society's
director of research, Richard Harvey, said: "It's good to be imaginative
and inventive when looking for new treatments. But more than 95% of drugs
initially developed in this way fall by the wayside.

"So we shouldn't get too excited about it, but it is an example of the
amount of enthusiasm and effort needed to discover effective treatments for
all sorts of diseases, but especially Alzheimer's."

A growing number of companies are looking at how the human memory works,
hoping to find drugs that can help offset memory loss in patients with
diseases ranging from Alzheimer's to depression, schizophrenia, stroke,
Parkinson's and Aids. It is a lucrative market, which pharmaceuticals'
companies are eager to capture.

One of the leaders in developing memory-enhancing drugs is Memory
Pharmaceuticals, a privately-held US company.   Its founder, Eric Kandel,
who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000, began his experiments into memory
with the Aplysia sea slug.

Memory Pharmaceuticals has discovered several compounds which show promise
in counteracting memory loss in animals and is hoping to start testing at
least one in humans within a year. The company's chief executive, Tony
Scullion, said: "What we have are a broader range of drugs that would work
in different diseases."

Cortex Pharmaceuticals Inc. in the US, is working on a class of compounds
shown to increase the production in the brain of nerotrophin BDNF (brain
derived neurotrophic factor), a substance apparently deficient in
Alzheimer's patients.

The company is enrolling patients with mild cognitive impairment, who have
memory difficulties, in a study to test its Ampakine compound.

As many as 80% of patients with cognitive impairment go on to develop
Alzheimer's over a five-year period.  About 700,000 people in the UK have
dementia, and of these, 500,000 have Alzheimer's disease. A variety of drug
treatments have been shown to benefit Alzheimer's patients.

These include:

- antioxidants such as selegiline designed to limit the impact of free
radicals
- cholinesterase Inhibitors including tacrine (Cognex) and donepezil (Aricept)
- the female sex hormone oestrogen
- nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDS)

BBC News Online: Health
http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/health/newsid_1912000/1912396.stm

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