(Press-News.org) Blocking a key receptor in brain cells that is used by oxygen free radicals could play a major role in neutralizing the biological consequences of Alzheimer's disease, according to researchers at Temple University.
The researchers' findings, "Modulation of AD Neuropathology and Memory Impairments by the Isoprostane F2α Is Mediated by the Thromboxane Receptor," were published Oct. 13 by the journal Neurobiology of Aging.
The human body's use of oxygen to produce energy often results in the formation of highly reactive molecules called oxygen free radicals. Oxidative stress occurs when the production of these free radicals is greater than the body's ability to detoxify them.
"Besides the two major signature brain pathologies associated with Alzheimer's disease, amyloid beta plaques and the tangles which are formed from the phosphorylation of the tau protein, researchers have also known for a while that there is a signature from oxidation stress," said Domenico Praticὸ, professor of pharmacology and microbiology and immunology in Temple's School of Medicine, who led the study. "But it has always been believed that oxidative stress was just a bystander and did not have an active function in the development of the disease."
In their study, Praticὸ and his colleagues discovered that the free radicals produced from oxidative stress actually bind to a protein receptor in the brain called the thromboxane receptor, or TP, and transmit signals to the neuronal cells to increase the production of amyloid beta or phosphorylated tau, the two major Alzheimer's pathologies.
"Basically, it sends the wrong message inside the neuronal cells, and with time, this definitely will result in all the clinical manifestations of the disease, such as cognitive impairment, loss of memory and brain cell death," he said.
The researchers introduced free radicals into the brain of a mouse model for Alzheimer's and witnessed a worsening of the animal's memory and learning capabilities, as well as an increase in amyloid beta and tangles.
However, they also treated a subset of the mice with a compound known to block the TP receptor in the brain. In this group, said Praticὸ, there was no manifestation of the cognitive impairment experienced by the non-treated mice.
"This indirectly confirmed for us that the free radicals worked through this receptor," he said. "Using this compound, we were able to completely neutralize the biological consequences of the free radicals in terms of the amyloid beta production (plaques) and tau phosphorylation (tangles)."
Praticὸ said that the findings implicating oxidative stress and the TP receptor open an important chapter for Alzheimer's treatment.
"For the first time we have identified this receptor as the culprit responsible for the bad things that happen with the disease when high levels of oxygen free radicals are produced."
Praticὸ said that the TP receptor can now be considered a new target for therapies, and his group is working on developing additional compounds that even more efficiently block the receptor, making it unavailable to free radicals.
INFORMATION:
The study was funded through a grant from the Alzheimer's Art Quilt Initiative.
NOTE: Copies of this study are available to working journalists and may be obtained by contacting Preston M. Moretz in Temple University Communications at pmoretz@temple.edu.
As genome sequencing has gotten faster and cheaper, the pace of whole-genome sequencing has accelerated, dramatically increasing the number of genomes deposited in public archives. Although these genomes are a valuable resource, problems can arise when researchers misapply computational methods to assemble them, or accidentally introduce unnoticed contaminations during sequencing.
The first complete bacterial genome, Haemophilus influenzae, appeared in 1995, and today the public GenBank database contains over 27,000 prokaryotic and 1,600 eukaryotic genomes. The vast majority ...
The landmark discovery of a tiny defect in a vital heart protein has for the first time enabled heart specialists to accurately pinpoint a therapeutic target for future efforts in developing a drug-based cure for cardiovascular diseases.
Scientists from Cardiff University and the Slovak Academy of Science have identified defects in a colossal heart protein which often leads to stroke and heart failure.
"Our research has revealed that a genetic alteration in the largest membrane protein, responsible for triggering each and every heartbeat, produces a small structural ...
Scientists have revealed the mechanisms that enable certain brain cells to persuade others to create 'Mexican waves' linked with cognitive function.
Ultimately, the team say their work may help researchers understand more about normal brain function and about neurocognitive disorders such as dementia.
Neurons are cells in the brain that communicate chemical and electrical information and they belong to one of two groups- inhibitory or excitatory. While much is known about excitatory neurons, the role of inhibitory neurons is still being debated.
Inhibitory neurons ...
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (NOVEMBER 18, 2014). Neurosurgeons and neurointerventionalists at Kyungpook National University in the Republic of Korea have developed a formal protocol for delivering emergency treatment to patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) from ruptured aneurysms within the first few hours after bleeding occurs. The emergency treatment plan, offered day and night, is shown to reduce the incidence of repeated hemorrhage during the hospital stay and improve clinical outcomes in patients with aneurysmal SAH. This treatment plan is described and discussed in ...
OAK BROOK, Ill. - Radiologists from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Emory University School of Medicine have issued a special report on radiology preparedness for handling cases of Ebola virus. The report, outlining their protocols and recommendations, is published in the online edition of the journal Radiology.
Healthcare administrators are placing a major emphasis on Ebola preparedness training at medical facilities throughout the U.S. Failure to have proper procedures in place to diagnose and treat patients with Ebola virus was cited as a major reason for ...
New federal regulations requiring school meals to contain more whole grains, less saturated fat and more fruits and vegetables, while perhaps improving some aspects of the food being served at schools across the United States, may also be perpetuating eating habits linked to obesity, diabetes and other diet-related diseases, an analysis by Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health researchers has found.
The reasons: Based on analysis of school meals and the new requirements, the whole grains served are mostly processed, which means they are converted into sugar ...
NEW ORLEANS (Nov. 18, 2014) - Researchers from Drexel University in Philadelphia will present research on a wide range of public health topics emphasizing urban health challenges, geographic methods in public health, community resilience and more, at the 142nd annual meeting and exposition of the American Public Health Association Nov. 15-19.
A few selected highlights among the dozens of posters and presentations by faculty, staff and students from the Drexel University School of Public Health include:
What Makes Communities Resilient in Times of Adversity?
Psychologists ...
Early sodium supplementation for very premature infants can enhance weight gain according to a recent study by researchers at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
The results of the study, published today in the OnlineFirst version of the Journal of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (JPEN), the research journal of the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (A.S.P.E.N.), examined 53 infants during the first months of life who had been born at less than 32 weeks of pregnancy.
Poor growth of premature ...
Researchers at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis say acculturative stress may explain, in part, why Indiana's Latino youth face an alarming disparity in depression and suicide rates when compared to their white counterparts.
While examining epidemiological health disparities data, a team of researchers led by Silvia Bigatti at the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health noticed that Latino teens in Indiana had a 65 percent higher rate of suicide attempts and a 24 percent higher rate of depression than white teens.
"When we saw the alarming disparity ...
Promoting and maintaining financial fraud whistleblower programs, such as those of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), is costly.
Cases involving whistleblowers require significant resources as they take nearly 10 months longer to complete. Rewards for whistleblowers who come forward with original information leading to an enforcement action can be large, ranging from 10% to 30% of monetary sanctions over $1 million. This past September, the SEC awarded $30 million to a whistleblower--it's largest award yet. ...