Print

Print


Single therapy may treat Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Mad Cow

Researchers have discovered an important similarity in the causes of
cell degeneration and death in diseases such as Alzheimer's,
Parkinson's, Huntington's, type II diabetes and CJD, suggesting that
a single therapy could combat these different ailments. University of
California at Irvine molecular biologists Charles Glabe and Rakez
Kayed found that small toxic molecules believed to trigger cell
damage in these diseases have a similar structure. The study, which
appears in the April 18, 2003 issue of Science, implies that these
molecules, called toxic soluble oligomers, share parallel functions,
which makes them suitable targets for new drugs or vaccines that
could halt progression of many degenerative diseases.

From the UC Irvine:

Toxic molecule may provide key for developing vaccine against
degenerative diseases
Researchers find important similarity among Alzheimer's, Parkinson's,
Huntington's and other degenerative diseases

Irvine, Calif, April 17, 2003
UC Irvine researchers have discovered an important similarity in the
causes of cell degeneration and death in diseases such as
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, type II diabetes and CJD,
suggesting that a single therapy could combat these different
ailments.

UCI molecular biologists Charles Glabe and Rakez Kayed found that
small toxic molecules believed to trigger cell damage in these
diseases have a similar structure. The study, which appears in the
April 18, 2003 issue of Science, implies that these molecules, called
toxic soluble oligomers, share parallel functions, which makes them
suitable targets for new drugs or vaccines that could halt
progression of many degenerative diseases.

"This discovery will help focus attention on what may be the primary
mechanism for degeneration and cell death," said Glabe, professor of
molecular biology and biochemistry. "Whatever makes these molecules
toxic is likely to be the same for all of the different types of
oligomers in the different diseases."

During the progression of these degenerative diseases, proteins
called amyloids accumulate as fibrils and begin to damage healthy
cells. Oligomer molecules serve as intermediate building blocks
during this fibril formation process, and recent studies have found
that these oligomers constitute the toxic element that triggers this
cell damage.

In the UCI study, the researchers applied an oligomer-specific
antibody to amyloid proteins that have been identified in
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's, type II diabetes and prion-
related disease. They found that the antibody bound only with the
oligomer molecules, but did not bind with the normal amyloid proteins
or amyloid molecules in the fibrils. This was true across different
diseases, even though the proteins that make up the molecules in
these diseases are distinct.

"Antibodies recognize other molecules by a lock and key mechanism,"
Glabe said. "If the same lock can be opened by several different
keys, you can be reasonably sure that the keys, in this case the
amyloid oligomers, have the same shape or structure."

The UCI research team also found that the oligomer-specific antibody
blocked the oligomers' abilities to kill cultured neuronal cells in
all of the protein groups they studied. If the oligomer-specific
antibody has the same protective effect in humans, it may be possible
to develop a vaccine that will simultaneously protect people against
several different degenerative diseases.

"Vaccination has already proven to be effective in preventing amyloid
accumulation and loss of neuronal function in animal models of
Alzheimer's disease, but human clinical trials of this vaccine were
halted because of inflammatory side effects in a fraction of the
patients," Glabe said. "Our antibody may be able to overcome these
problems because it targets only these toxic oligomer molecules and
not the normal proteins."

Assisting in the study were UCI molecular biologists Jennifer L.
Thompson and Saskia C. Milton, UCI chemist Theresa M. McIntire, and
Elizabeth Head and Carl W. Cotman of the UCI Institute for Brain
Aging and Dementia. This work was supported by grants from the Larry
L. Hillblom Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

SOURCE: ScienceBLOG
http://www.scienceblog.com/community/article1506.html

* * *

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn