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Public release date: 9-May-2003

Contact: George Stamatis
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216-368-3635
Case Western Reserve University

Researchers find signs of lethal cell division in mouse models for AD
Clues as to why AD mice may not exhibit neuron death as seen in
humans

For many years now, scientists have relied on genetically engineered
mouse models of Alzheimer disease (AD) to chart new course for
treatment and diagnosis. The best known (and best studied) of these
are lines carrying extra copies of either the beta-amyloid precursor
protein gene or the presenilin-1 gene in their genomes. These mutant
genes are known to cause early-onset familial AD, an inherited form
of the disease. These models have been highly successful in modeling
the process of amyloid plaque deposition, the pathological signature
of AD, and the mice develop behavioral defects. However, the models
have been disappointing in that they fail to mimic the substantial
loss of nerve cells normally occurring during the development of
dementia in AD.

New work to be presented at the 6th International Conference for
Alzheimer's Disease/Parkinson's Disease, May 8 through 12 in Seville,
Spain, by researchers from the University Memory and Aging Center and
the departments of Neuroscience and Genetics at Case Western Reserve
University (CWRU) and University Hospitals of Cleveland (UHC) offers
a major new insight into this discrepancy between the human and mouse
conditions.

The laboratory of Karl Herrup, Ph.D., has previously reported that
the neurons in the susceptible brain regions of AD begin a lethal
attempt at cell division before they die. (Mature brain cells are not
programmed to divide.) Furthermore, once the lethal cell division
begins, the death process itself appears to take up to a year to
complete.

Now, Yan Yang, Bruce Lamb, Ph.D., and Herrup of UHC and CWRU have
examined the mouse models of AD engineered by Lamb and looked for
signs of cell division, or cell cycle events. The team has discovered
that, just like their human counterparts, the nerve cells which are
at-risk for death in the mouse AD model duplicate their DNA. In other
words, they make an attempt at cell division.

"We know that this is a bad decision for an adult nerve cell to make.
It almost always dies when it tries to divide," says Herrup. "Finding
that the disease process begins in the mouse in the same way that it
does in the human means that the mouse model may be much better than
we thought at first."

But why don't researchers see signs of neuron death? Yang suggests,
"It may be that the mouse simply doesn't live long enough." The
average life expectance of a laboratory mouse is a little over two
years. If the long time interval between starting cell division and
nerve cell death is the same in mouse and human, the death of the
mouse at two years may well block any chance researchers would have
to see the actual cell death process start.

"Nonetheless, knowing that the underlying mechanism of cell death is
the same means that experimental therapies can be tested productively
in these model systems," says Herrup.

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SOURCE: EurekAlert
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-05/cwru-rfs050503.php

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