作者mulkcs (mulkcs)
看板Cognitive
標題[新知] 阿茲海默症的病源也許不是腦,而是肝臟。
時間Sat Mar 5 21:29:53 2011
Liver, Not Brain, May Be Origin of Alzheimer’s Plaques
ScienceDaily (Mar. 3, 2011) — Unexpected results from a Scripps Research
Institute and ModGene, LLC study could completely alter scientists' ideas
about Alzheimer's disease -- pointing to the liver instead of the brain as
the source of the "amyloid" that deposits as brain plaques associated with
this devastating condition. The findings could offer a relatively simple
approach for Alzheimer's prevention and treatment.
The study was published online March 3 in The Journal of Neuroscience
Research.
In the study, the scientists used a mouse model for Alzheimer's disease to
identify genes that influence the amount of amyloid that accumulates in the
brain. They found three genes that protected mice from brain amyloid
accumulation and deposition. For each gene, lower expression in the liver
protected the mouse brain. One of the genes encodes presenilin -- a cell
membrane protein believed to contribute to the development of human
Alzheimer's.
"This unexpected finding holds promise for the development of new therapies
to fight Alzheimer's," said Scripps Research Professor Greg Sutcliffe, who
led the study. "This could greatly simplify the challenge of developing
therapies and prevention."
An estimated 5.1 million Americans have Alzheimer's disease, including nearly
half of people age 85 and older. By 2050, the number of people age 65 and
over with this disease will range from 11 million to 16 million unless
science finds a way to prevent or effectively treat it. In addition to the
human misery caused by the disease, there is the unfathomable cost. A new
report from the Alzheimer's Association shows that in the absence of
disease-modifying treatments, the cumulative costs of care for people with
Alzheimer's from 2010 to 2050 will exceed $20 trillion.
A Genetic Search-and-Find Mission
In trying to help solve the Alzheimer's puzzle, in the past few years
Sutcliffe and his collaborators have focused their research on naturally
occurring, inherited differences in neurological disease susceptibility among
different mouse strains, creating extensive databases cataloging gene
activity in different tissues, as measured by mRNA accumulation. These data
offer up maps of trait expression that can be superimposed on maps of disease
modifier genes.
As is the case with nearly all scientific discovery, Sutcliffe's research
builds on previous findings. Several years ago, researchers at Case Western
Reserve mapped three genes that modify the accumulation of pathological beta
amyloid in the brains of a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease to
large chromosomal regions, each containing hundreds of genes. The Case
Western scientists used crosses between the B6 and D2 strains of mice,
studying more than 500 progeny.
Using the results from this study, Sutcliffe turned his databases of gene
expression to the mouse model of Alzheimer's, looking for differences in gene
expression that correlated with differences in disease susceptibility between
the B6 and D2 strains. This intensive work involved writing computer programs
that identified each genetic difference that distinguished the B6 and D2
genomes, then running mathematical correlation analysis (known as regression
analysis) of each difference. Correlations were made between the genotype
differences (B6 or D2) and the amount of mRNA product made from each of the
more than 25,000 genes in a particular tissue in the 40 recombinant inbred
mouse strains. These correlations were repeated 10 times to cover 10 tissues,
the liver being one of them.
"A key aspect of this work was learning how to ask questions of massive data
sets to glean information about the identities of heritable modifier genes,"
Sutcliffe said. "This was novel and, in a sense, groundbreaking work: we were
inventing a new way to identify modifier genes, putting all of these steps
together and automating the process. We realized we could learn about how a
transgene's pathogenic effect was being modified without studying the
transgenic mice ourselves."
Looking for a Few Good Candidates
Sutcliffe's gene hunt offered up good matches, candidates, for each of the
three disease modifier genes discovered by the Case Western scientists, and
one of these candidates -- the mouse gene corresponding to a gene known to
predispose humans carrying particular variations of it to develop early-onset
Alzheimer's disease -- was of special interest to his team.
"The product of that gene, called Presenilin2, is part of an enzyme complex
involved in the generation of pathogenic beta amyloid," Sutcliffe explained.
"Unexpectedly, heritable expression of Presenilin2 was found in the liver but
not in the brain. Higher expression of Presenilin2 in the liver correlated
with greater accumulation of beta amyloid in the brain and development of
Alzheimer's-like pathology."
This finding suggested that significant concentrations of beta amyloid might
originate in the liver, circulate in the blood, and enter the brain. If true,
blocking production of beta amyloid in the liver should protect the brain.
To test this hypothesis, Sutcliffe's team set up an in vivo experiment using
wild-type mice since they would most closely replicate the natural beta
amyloid-producing environment. "We reasoned that if brain amyloid was being
born in the liver and transported to the brain by the blood, then that should
be the case in all mice," Sutcliffe said, "and one would predict in humans,
too."
The mice were administered imatinib (trade name Gleevec, an FDA-approved
cancer drug), a relatively new drug currently approved for treatment of
chronic myelogenous leukemia and gastrointestinal tumors. The drug potently
reduces the production of beta amyloid in neuroblastoma cells transfected by
amyloid precursor protein (APP) and also in cell-free extracts prepared from
the transfected cells. Importantly, Gleevec has poor penetration of the
blood-brain barrier in both mice and humans.
"This characteristic of the drug is precisely why we chose to use it,"
Sutcliffe explained. "Because it doesn't penetrate the blood-brain barrier,
we were able to focus on the production of amyloid outside of the brain and
how that production might contribute to amyloid that accumulates in the
brain, where it is associated with disease."
The mice were injected with Gleevec twice a day for seven days; then plasma
and brain tissue were collected, and the amount of beta amyloid in the blood
and brain was measured. The findings: the drug dramatically reduced beta
amyloid not only in the blood, but also in the brain where the drug cannot
penetrate. Thus, an appreciable portion of brain amyloid must originate
outside of the brain, and imatinib represents a candidate for preventing and
treating Alzheimer's.
As for the future of this research, Sutcliffe says he hopes to find a partner
and investors to move the work into clinical trials and new drug development.
In addition to Sutcliffe, the authors of the study, titled "Peripheral
reduction of β-amyloid is sufficient to reduce brain Aβ: implications for
Alzheimer's disease," include Peter Hedlund and Elizabeth Thomas of Scripps
Research, and Floyd Bloom and Brian Hilbush of ModGene, LLC, which funded the
project.
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原文網址:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/03/110303134435.htm
論文:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jnr.2260
大意是這篇發表在Journal of Neuroscience的文章指出
也許阿茲海默的病源並非是在腦而是在肝。
研究人員發現有三種基因可以防止澱粉蛋白堆積在腦部,
三個基因若在肝臟的表現比較低的話就可以防止澱粉蛋白堆積在腦部。
其中一個合成presenilin,是一個認為和阿茲海默有關的細胞膜蛋白。
這項發現或許會改變如何預防以及治療阿茲海默症。
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