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

New discovery for how the brain 'tangles' in Alzheimer's Disease

University of Queensland researchers have discovered a new 'seeding' process in brain cells that could be a cause of dementia and Alzheimer's disease.

New discovery for how the brain 'tangles' in Alzheimer's Disease
2021-02-02
(Press-News.org) University of Queensland researchers have discovered a new 'seeding' process in brain cells that could be a cause of dementia and Alzheimer's disease.

UQ's Queensland Brain Institute dementia researcher Professor Jürgen Götz said the study revealed that tangled neurons, a hallmark sign of dementia, form in part by a cellular process that has gone astray and allows a toxic protein, tau, to leak into healthy brain cells.

"These leaks create a damaging seeding process that causes tau tangles and ultimately lead to memory loss and other impairments," Professor Götz said.

Professor Götz said until now researchers did not understand how tau seeds were able to escape after their uptake into healthy cells.

"In people with Alzheimer's disease, it seems the tiny sacs transporting messages within or outside the cells, called exosomes, trigger a reaction which punches holes in the wall of their own cell membrane and allows the toxic seeds to escape," he said.

"As more tau builds up in the brain, it eventually forms tangles, and together with abnormally configured proteins known as amyloid plaque, they form the key features of these neurological diseases."

Queensland Brain Institute researcher Dr Juan Polanco said the findings would help scientists piece together how non-inherited forms of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias occur.

"The more we understand the underlying mechanisms, the easier it will be to interfere with the process and to slow down or even halt the disease," Dr Polanco said.

"Along with Alzheimer's, this cellular process might also play a leading role in other cognitive diseases, from frontal lobe dementia to rare neurological disorders with toxic tau.

"Even in cancer research, there is emerging evidence showing these exosomes can load unique messages that reflect the condition of tumours and enables them to replicate and spread cancer more quickly through the body.

"Improving our understanding of how Alzheimer's and other diseases spread through exosomes will allow us to create new ways to treat and intervene in these cellular processes in the future."

Professor Götz directs research at QBI's Clem Jones Centre for Ageing Dementia Research. A team in his research group, led by Dr Polanco, is looking at the role of exosomes and cell dysfunction as a risk factor in neurodegenerative diseases.

INFORMATION:

This research is published in Acta Neuropathologica (DOI:10.1007/s00401-020-02254-3, PMID: 33417012).

It has also been featured in the US-based AlzForum website.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
New discovery for how the brain 'tangles' in Alzheimer's Disease

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Nasal spray that protects against COVID-19 is also effective against the common cold

Nasal spray that protects against COVID-19 is also effective against the common cold
2021-02-02
Research into a new drug which primes the immune system in the respiratory tract and is in development for COVID-19 shows it is also effective against rhinovirus. Rhinovirus is the most common respiratory virus, the main cause of the common cold and is responsible for exacerbations of chronic respiratory diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. In a study recently published in the European Respiratory Journal (LINK), the drug, known as INNA-X, is shown to be effective in a pre-clinical infection model and in human airway cells. Treatment with INNA-X prior to infection with rhinovirus significantly reduced viral load and inhibited harmful inflammation. University of Newcastle and Hunter Medical Research Institute (HMRI) researcher Associate Professor ...

Highly deformable piezoelectric nanotruss for tactile electronics

Highly deformable piezoelectric nanotruss for tactile electronics
2021-02-02
With the importance of non-contact environments growing due to COVID-19, tactile electronic devices using haptic technology are gaining traction as new mediums of communication. Haptic technology is being applied in a wide array of fields such as robotics or interactive displays. haptic gloves are being used for augmented information communication technology. Efficient piezoelectric materials that can convert various mechanical stimuli into electrical signals and vice versa are a prerequisite for advancing high-performing haptic technology. A research team led by Professor Seungbum Hong confirmed the potential of tactile devices by developing ceramic piezoelectric materials that are three times more deformable. For the fabrication of highly deformable nanomaterials, the ...

Youth with autism see sharp decline in physical activity between ages 9-13

2021-02-02
A recent study from Oregon State University has found that to best help kids with autism maintain healthy rates of physical activity, interventions should be targeted during the ages of 9 to 13, as that's when kids show the biggest drop in active time. The study is one of the first to look at this issue on a longitudinal scale. It relied on a dataset of families in Ireland spanning three in-depth interviews between 2007 and 2016. Kids in the survey had their first interview at age 9, the second at 13 and the third at 17 or 18. The OSU study compared 88 children with autism to 88 children without autism over the nine-year survey period to gauge both how physical activity changed over time, and how much ...

Non-metallic electronic regulation in CuCo oxy-/thio-spinel as OER electrocatalysts

Non-metallic electronic regulation in CuCo oxy-/thio-spinel as OER electrocatalysts
2021-02-02
Oxygen evolution reaction (OER), as a vital half-reaction in some clean energy storage and conversion technologies including rechargeable metal-air batteries, regenerative fuel cells and electrochemical water splitting, has been of crucial importance for exploring highly efficient sustainable energy to substitute exhaustible fossil fuels. Among them, electrochemical water splitting can effectively produce clean and reproducible hydrogen fuels through renewable energy sources as power input like solar energy, etc. Unfortunately, the efficiency of water splitting is mainly impeded by the high anodic overpotential of OER, in which seeking efficient and stable electrocatalysts is highly desirable. It has been considered that spinel-structure materials can be meaningful alternative catalysts ...

Tsunamis and tsunami warning: recent progress and future prospects

Tsunamis and tsunami warning: recent progress and future prospects
2021-02-02
Tsunamis are one of the most destructive disasters in the ocean. Large tsunamis are mostly generated by earthquakes, and they can propagate across the ocean without significantly losing energy. During the shoaling process in coastal areas, the wave amplitude increases dramatically, causing severe life loss and property damage. There have been frequent tsunamis since the 21st century, drawing the attention of many countries on the study of tsunami mechanism and warning. Tsunami records also play an essential role in deriving earthquake rupture models in subduction zones. A recent paper entitled "Tsunamis and tsunami warning: recent progress and future prospects" by Dr. Chao An from Shanghai Jiao Tong University reviews the recent research progress of earthquake-generated ...

Study finds recommended ICU sedatives equally safe, effective

2021-02-02
Sedative medications used in intensive care are associated with increased delirium, which is in turn connected with higher medical costs and greater risk of death and ICU-related dementia. A study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine provides the most definitive evidence to date that, of the two drugs recommended for light sedation of patients receiving mechanical ventilation in the ICU, one is as effective and safe as the other. Mechanical ventilation is a life-saving intervention often involving a breathing tube inserted in the patient's windpipe, typically entailing light sedation to quell the attendant discomfort, anxiety and psychological stress. Several studies have sought evidence of which ...

New evidence sheds light on treatment for patients with respiratory failure from COVID-19

2021-02-02
Boston, Mass. - COVID-19 has caused more than 2 million deaths worldwide since the World Health Organization declared it a pandemic in March 2020. Patients with severe COVID-19 frequently experience respiratory distress and require assistance breathing. For patients whose lungs are so injured that even a ventilator is unable to deliver enough oxygen, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) -- which does the work of the lungs by removing carbon dioxide and adding oxygen to blood outside the body -- may improve the odds of survival for certain patients with severe COVID-19. A study by physician-researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) provides new evidence that critically ill patients with ...

Harvard researchers use machine learning models to study health impacts of walnuts

2021-02-02
FOLSOM, Calif., February 2, 2021 - Researchers, from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in collaboration with investigators from Rovira i Virgili University and the University of Navarra, Spain, used machine learning models, a subset of artificial intelligence, to identify more precisely the components in walnuts that may be responsible for potentially reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases - two of the leading causes of death in the U.S. This study, supported by the California Walnut Commission and published in the Journal of Nutrition, used a novel machine learning model to identify 19 metabolites that were associated with walnut consumption. The body forms specific metabolites based on what food is consumed. The walnut ...

Study aims to break the chains of incarceration in African American males

Study aims to break the chains of incarceration in African American males
2021-02-02
Over the last three decades, the United States prison population has exploded from 300,000 to more than 2 million. More than 1.1 million are African American men - the vast number of whom have returned within one to three years of their release. In fact, according to the World Prison Brief, America boasts the highest recidivism rate at more than 50 percent. Although African American men are more likely to participate in re-entry programs, they continue to struggle with recidivism and reunification at higher rates. The common conception of assisting individuals impacted by incarceration is to provide practical needs such as housing, food and employment. Often, these services are insufficient when the core of their issues is related to psychological factors. ...

Significant cancer rates in California sea lions has major human health implications

Significant cancer rates in California sea lions has major human health implications
2021-02-02
Scientists at The Marine Mammal Center - the world's largest marine mammal hospital - have found that viral-caused cancer in adult California sea lions is significantly increased by their exposure to toxins in the environment. The study is the result of over 20 years of research and examination of nearly 400 California sea lion patients by The Marine Mammal Center. The Marine Mammal Center has been on the forefront of researching and understanding cancer in California sea lions and its connection to both ocean and human health. Since the cancer in sea lions was first discovered in 1979, between 18-23 percent of adult sea lions admitted to the Center's hospital have died of the fatal disease - the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Genetic studies reveal new insights into cognitive impairment in schizophrenia

Researcher develops technology to provide cleaner energy and cleaner water

Expect the unexpected: nanoscale silver unveils intrinsic self-healing abilities

nTIDE September 2024 Jobs Report: Gains in employment for people with disabilities appear to level off after reducing gaps with non-disabled workers

Wiley enhances NMR Spectral Library Collection with extensive new databases

Renowned psychiatrist Dr. Gustavo Turecki sheds light on depression, suicide, and brain trauma response

Plasmonic modulators could enable high-capacity space communication

UPenn’s Orphan Disease Center to amplify SYNGAP1 research: SynGAP Research Fund’s Million Dollar Bike Ride team raises $74,851 for one-year grant

Crystallized alternative DNA structure sheds light on insulin and diabetes

Protecting just 0.7% of world’s land could help save a third of most unique and endangered species

TGF-beta and RAS signaling are both required for lung cancer metastasis, study finds

5 lessons to level up conservation successfully

Researchers advance new class of quantum critical metal that could advance electronic devices

DOE, ORNL announce opportunity to define the future of high-performance computing

Cannabidiol demonstrated to alleviate symptoms of Leigh syndrome

A chemical cocktail of micropollutants amplified the effect of algal toxins causing mass fish mortality on the River Oder in 2022

Generative AI in cancer imaging: revolutionizing detection & diagnosis

Disparity in access to medications for opioid use disorder persist in criminal legal settings

Age-related changes in male fibroblasts increase treatment-resistant melanoma

COVID-19 and rates of cancer diagnosis in the US

New research from Swansea University shines a light on how solar power and farming can coexist

Artificial lymphoid organs could help predict efficacy of booster vaccines

One antibody to neutralize them all?

How context-specific factors control gene activity

Detects cancer genes with ultra-high sensitivity!

Study suggests US droughts, rainy extremes becoming more severe

Quality assurance in histopathology laboratories

Causing environmental damage should be a criminal offense, say 72% of people surveyed in G20 countries

Natural probiotic discovered in UK newborns microbiomes

Hijacking the command center of the cell: nuclear parasites in deep-sea mussels

[Press-News.org] New discovery for how the brain 'tangles' in Alzheimer's Disease
University of Queensland researchers have discovered a new 'seeding' process in brain cells that could be a cause of dementia and Alzheimer's disease.