PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

After death, twin brains show similar patterns of neuropathologic changes

2014-02-27
(Press-News.org) Despite widespread use of a single term, Alzheimer's disease is actually a diverse collection of diseases, symptoms and pathological changes. What's happening in the brain often varies widely from patient to patient, and a trigger for one person may be harmless is another.

In a unique study, an international team of researchers led by USC psychologist Margaret Gatz compared the brains of twins where one or both died of Alzheimer's disease. They found that many of the twin pairs not only had similar progressions of Alzheimer's disease and dementia prior to death, but they also had similar combinations of pathologies — two-or-more unconnected areas of damage to the brain.

The paper is part of Gatz's landmark body of work on aging and cognition with the Swedish Twin Registry, a large cohort study of more than 14,000 Swedish twins, now over the age of 65. Across nearly 30 years, Gatz's work with twins — including genetically identical pairs — has shifted the study of Alzheimer's disease to include the entire lifespan, including the effects of developmental exposure, periodontal disease, mental health, obesity and diabetes on later-life Alzheimer's risk.

The current paper provides more evidence that there may not be a single smoking-gun cause of Alzheimer's, but rather a range of potential causes to which we may be susceptible largely depending on our genetics. It appears in the current issue of the journal Brain Pathology.

"We try to make inferences based on tests and diagnoses, but we have to assume that what we're seeing is a manifestation of what's going on in these twins' brains," said Gatz, professor of psychology, gerontology and preventive medicine in USC Dornsife College. "For this reason, we wanted to compare the brains of twins to ask whether identical twins' brains are actually more identical?"

The researchers had the rare opportunity to directly autopsy the brains of seven pairs of twins who both died after being receiving diagnostic evaluations over many years, including a pair of identical twins who were both diagnosed with Alzheimer's and died within a year of one another at the age of 98.

"There may be risk factors that start to accumulate but don't lead to a clinical diagnosis," explained lead author Diego Iacono of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and the Biomedical Research Institute. "We found that the presence of Alzheimer's disease doesn't preclude the presence of other damage. Looking at co-pathologies in twin pairs may present new areas for research aside from the typical factors."

For example, while there's wide consensus among experts about the course of Alzheimer's disease and the presence of amyloid plaques and tangles in the brain, what starts the process going is less clear, including the role of lesions, Lewy bodies and vascular or ventricle damage, more often associated with specific types of dementia such as Parkinson's disease.

"Identical twins tended to have similar combinations of pathologies. We looked not just at the hallmark indicators of Alzheimer's, but at all the other damage in the brain. Across the whole array of neuropathological changes, the identical twins appeared to have more similar pathologies," Gatz said. "This is fascinating: it's not just a key pathology related to the twins' diagnoses but the combination of things happening in their brains. We're going to keep looking for what these combinations are."

INFORMATION: The research was funded by the NIH grants R01 AG08724, AG04563, AG10175 AND AG08861.

For more information or to request an interview with Professor Gatz, contact Suzanne Wu at suzanne.wu@usc.edu.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Closest, brightest supernova in decades is also a little weird

Closest, brightest supernova in decades is also a little weird
2014-02-27
A bright supernova discovered only six weeks ago in a nearby galaxy is provoking new questions about the exploding stars that scientists use as their main yardstick for measuring the universe. Called SN 2014J, the glowing supernova was discovered by a professor and his students in the United Kingdom on Jan. 21, about a week after the stellar explosion first became visible as a pinprick of light in its galaxy, M82, 11.4 million light years away. Still visible today through small telescopes in the Big Dipper, it is the brightest supernova seen from Earth since SN1987A, ...

Cushing's syndrome: A genetic basis for cortisol excess

2014-02-27
An international team of researchers led by an endocrinologist at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich has identified genetic mutations that result in uncontrolled synthesis and secretion of the stress hormone cortisol. Cortisol is a hormone that is produced by the adrenal gland in response to stressful events, and modulates a whole spectrum of physiological processes. An international research collaboration has now identified genetic mutations that lead to the production and secretion of cortisol in the absence of an underlying stressor. The discovery emerged ...

Why dark chocolate is good for your heart

2014-02-27
It might seem too good to be true, but dark chocolate is good for you and scientists now know why. Dark chocolate helps restore flexibility to arteries while also preventing white blood cells from sticking to the walls of blood vessels. Both arterial stiffness and white blood cell adhesion are known factors that play a significant role in atherosclerosis. What's more, the scientists also found that increasing the flavanol content of dark chocolate did not change this effect. This discovery was published in the March 2014 issue of The FASEB Journal. "We provide a more ...

System-wide analyses have underestimated the importance of transcription in animals

2014-02-27
Over the last ten years, a number of studies have suggested that, in animal cells, translation and protein turnover play a larger role in determining the different levels at which proteins are expressed than transcription. The major evidence supporting these claims is a weak correlation between system-wide protein and mRNA abundance measurements. A highly cited Nature article by Schwanhausser et al. in 2011 provides the most comprehensive example of such analyses. A new study just published in PeerJ by Li et al., however, questions the conclusions of these papers. This ...

Cancer vaccine could use immune system to fight tumors

2014-02-27
CINCINNATI—Cincinnati Cancer Center (CCC) and UC Cancer Institute researchers have found that a vaccine, targeting tumors that produce a certain protein and receptor responsible for communication between cells and the body's immune system, could initiate the immune response to fight cancer. These findings, published in the Feb. 27 online edition of the journal Gene Therapy, build on previously reported research and could lead to new treatments for cancer. Principal Investigator John Morris, MD, clinical co-leader of the Molecular Therapeutics and Diagnosis Program for ...

Arizona State University's Dust Devil Microgravity Research Team Has Astrophysics Experiment Proposal Accepted to NASA's Microgravity University

2014-02-27
The Dust Devils Microgravity Research Team of Arizona State University has been accepted to this year's Microgravity University run by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The proposal consisted of an astrophysics experiment testing the first seconds of galaxy formation. ASU's Microgravity Research Team will be heading to Texas's Ellington Field, part of Johnson Space Center, in April to test their experiment on the modified Boeing 727-200, a plane that creates near-weightlessness during the flight. The astrophysics experiment being tested tries ...

Be Part of the New Publishing Revolution with "The Last Word"

2014-02-27
The past decade has been a time of great upheaval for the publishing industry, with the major publishers' stranglehold over the book world being wrested away by independent authors seeking more creative control over their work. But it is no easy thing for an author to challenge these corporate Goliaths; funding their projects alone can seem an insurmountable task. For one independent author, the $7,500.00 needed to bring his novel to life would be impossible alone. However, thanks to the relatively new phenomenon of crowdfunding, Paul Combs, author of the novel "The ...

Blair, Bohle & Whitsitt, PLLC Announces Merger with Austin and Falls, CPAs

2014-02-27
Blair, Bohle & Whitsitt, PLLC (BBW) announces a major expansion of its current operations through an agreement to merge with Austin and Falls, CPAs effective January 1, 2014. The combined firm will offer an enhanced mix of tax compliance, assurance, and advisory services to individuals and the business community in Charlotte and the counties surrounding it. The merger will expand BBW's pre-merger annual revenue by approximately 25%, but will continue to focus on individuals and businesses seeking client-centered services from an experienced team of trusted advisors. ...

Fit Armadillo Announces Run Away from Winter, Get 5K Fit Online Training Program

2014-02-27
Today, Fit Armadillo, a fitness company specializing in online exercise options, announced the start of their newest group fitness program: Run Away from Winter, Get 5K Fit.  Since starting online group fitness programs last year, Fit Armadillo has run several 8 week programs to help busy individuals tone up without a gym membership. The Run Away from Winter, Get 5K Fit program will have the same goal, but with the added excitement that comes from training for a specific event.  With a March 31st start date, this group session allows beginning runners the ability to kick ...

Prudential to Streamline its Sales Bonus Process with Anaplan

2014-02-27
Prudential, a leading UK pensions provider, has selected Anaplan's integrated sales, operations and finance business modeling and planning platform to underpin improvements to its bonus modeling process. Anaplan's real-time modeling and calculation capabilities will enable Prudential to significantly shorten the end-to-end process for bonus calculation and payment across its UK Intermediary Channel. Prudential is implementing an uncluttered, streamlined system that will be the backbone of the bonus process. "By switching to Anaplan's platform, which allows us to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Roadmap for reducing, reusing, and recycling in space

Long-term HIV control: Could this combination therapy be the key?

Home hospital care demonstrates success in rural communities

Hospital-level care at home for adults living in rural settings

Health care access outcomes for immigrant children and state insurance policy

Change in weight status from childhood to young adulthood and risk of adult coronary heart disease

Researchers discover latent antimicrobial resistance across the world

Machine learning identifies senescence-inducing compound for p16-positive cancer cells

New SwRI laboratory to study the origins of planetary systems

Singing mice speak volumes

Tiny metal particles show promise for targeted cancer treatments

How supplemental feeding boosts reproductive conditions of urban squirrels

Insomnia combined with sleep apnea is associated with worse memory in older women

New AI could teach the next generation of surgeons

Study reveals alarming number of invasive breast cancers in younger women

‘beer belly’ linked to heart damage in men

Mini lung organoids made in bulk could help test personalized cancer treatments

New guideline on pre-exposure and postexposure HIV prevention

“Lung cancer should no longer be defined by fear and stigma,” experts say

Palliative care for adolescents and young adults with cancer

Cu (100) grain boundaries are key to efficient CO electroreduction on commercial copper

Cobalt-induced asymmetric electron distribution boosts photocatalytic hydrogen production efficiency

Ultra-low doping 0.1(PtMnFeCoNi)/TiO2 catalysts: Modulating the electronic states of active metal sites to enhance CO oxidation through high entropy strategy

Clinical use of nitrous oxide could help treat depression, major study shows

Report reveals potential of AI to help Higher Education sector assess its research more efficiently and fairly

Corporate social responsibility acts as an insurance policy when companies cut jobs and benefits during the times of crisis

Study finds gender gap in knee injuries

First ‘Bible map’ published 500 years ago still influences how we think about borders

Why metabolism matters in Fanconi anemia

Caribbean rainfall driven by shifting long-term patterns in the Atlantic high-pressure system, study finds

[Press-News.org] After death, twin brains show similar patterns of neuropathologic changes