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

Earliest-yet Alzheimer’s biomarker found in mouse model could point to new targets

2024-03-06
(Press-News.org) CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A surge of a neural-specific protein in the brain is the earliest-yet biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease, report University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researchers studying a mouse model of the disease. Furthermore, the increased protein activity leads to the seizures associated with the earliest stages of neurodegeneration, and inhibiting the protein in the mice slowed the onset and progression of seizure activity. 

The neural-specific protein, PSD-95, could pose a new target for Alzheimer’s research, early diagnosis and treatment, said study leader Nien-Pei Tsai, an Illinois professor of molecular and integrative physiology. 

Tsai’s group studies mice that make more of the proteins that form amyloid-beta, which progressively aggregates in Alzheimer’s disease to form plaques in the brain that hamper neural activity. However, in the new work, the group focused on a time frame much earlier in the mouse lifespan than others have studied – when no other markers or abnormalities have been reported, Tsai said.

“We were thinking, if we can catch anything that is happening early enough, maybe we can find a way to diagnose the disease earlier or slow down the progression,” Tsai said. “We know that Alzheimer's is irreversible. But if we can slow down the progression or even delay the onset of the disease, we can improve the quality of life for patients.”

While watching early neural development, first in neuron cultures and then in live mice, the researchers saw an elevation in PSD-95 levels. The PSD-95 protein’s job is to attract and pull other receptors to the synaptic surface – the space where two neurons pass signals to one another. 

“Our data suggests that the elevated PSD-95 is contributing to hyperexcitability in the brain. That’s a common phenotype is some of the early stages of Alzheimer's disease patients: They tend to have hyperexcitability or elevated seizure susceptibility in the brain, preceding and exacerbating the neurodegeneration that follows,” said Tsai, who also is affiliated with the Beckman Institute of Advanced Science and Technology at the U. of I. 

To confirm that increased PSD-95 was a driving force behind the seizure activity, the researchers inhibited PSD-95 in a mouse cohort. They saw reduced receptor activity at the synapse, fewer seizures in the mice and reduced mortality from seizures. 

“Our findings show that PSD-95 is a critical contributor to the hyperexcitability in the earliest stages of Alzheimer's. So we think that PSD-95 can be an early biomarker to indicate that a patient could have Alzheimer's disease or elevated seizure susceptibility. In terms of treatment, antibody inhibitors for PSD-95 could be useful in the early onset of Alzheimer’s, with more clinical study.”

The group published its findings in the journal EMBO Reports.

The researchers hope to partner with clinical research teams to determine whether their findings in mice correlate with samples from human patients. They also plan to study other receptors that PSD-95 interacts with on the synaptic surface to see if it plays a role in other symptoms of the disease or stages of its progression. 

“For example, the NMDA receptor has been shown to contribute to neural cell death in Alzheimer's disease. So we're trying to see whether by inhibiting PSD-95, we also can inhibit this particular NMDA receptor to slow down cell death.” 

The National Institutes of Health and the Alzheimer’s Association supported this work. 

Editor’s notes: To reach Nien-Pei Tsai, email nptsai@illinois.edu. The paper “Hyperfunction of post-synaptic density protein 95 promotes seizure response in early-stage aB pathology” is available online. 

The National Institute of Health supported this work through grants R01NS105615, R01MH124827 and R21AG071278.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Understanding wind and water at the equator key to more accurate future climate projections

2024-03-06
Getting climate models to mimic real-time observations when it comes to warming is critical – small discrepancies can lead to misunderstandings about the rate of global warming as the climate changes. A new study from North Carolina State University and Duke University finds that when modeling warming trends in the Pacific Ocean, there is still a missing piece to the modeling puzzle: the effect of wind on ocean currents in the equatorial Pacific. “The Pacific Ocean can act like a thermostat for the global climate,” says Sarah Larson, assistant professor of marine, ...

Long-acting opioids may be unnecessary in study of total knee replacement

2024-03-06
Replacing long-acting with immediate-release opioids after total knee replacement surgery resulted in comparable pain management but less nausea-medication usage and less need for residential rehabilitation after hospital discharge. The results of this small study, a Rutgers Nursing doctoral program project for lead author Anoush Kalachian, support a broader trend toward better management of prescription opioids – which directly resulted in the deaths of nearly 17,000 Americans in 2021 and can spur the use of illegal opioids. Widespread changes in opioid use patterns for knee replacement patients would have a significant impact on ...

Virtual reality exposure plus electric brain stimulation offers a promising treatment for PTSD

2024-03-06
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Combining two treatments could be a promising option for people, especially military veterans, whose lives are negatively affected by post-traumatic stress disorder, a new study shows. In a clinical trial conducted among U.S. military veterans at the Providence Veterans Affairs Medical Center, participants who received brain stimulation with a low electrical current during sessions of virtual reality exposure reported a significant reduction in PTSD symptom severity. The results ...

March research news from the Ecological Society of America

March research news from the Ecological Society of America
2024-03-06
The Ecological Society of America (ESA) presents a roundup of six research articles published in March issues across its six esteemed journals. Widely recognized for fostering innovation and advancing ecological knowledge, ESA's journals consistently feature innovative and impactful studies. The compilation of papers delves into beetle energetics, the interplay between wildfire and climate change, salamander conservation and more, showcasing the Society's commitment to promoting cutting-edge research ...

Diving dinosaurs? Certain methods may be unsuitable for inferring dino lifestyles

Diving dinosaurs? Certain methods may be unsuitable for inferring dino lifestyles
2024-03-06
The support for the hypothesis of Spinosaurus as an aquatic pursuit predator may have had fundamental flaws, according to Nathan Myhrvold of Intellectual Ventures, US and colleagues, in a study published March 6, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE. Paleontologists generally agree that the famous Spinosaurus was a fish-eater, but exactly how these dinosaurs caught their prey is the subject of lively debate, with some researchers suggesting that they hunted on the shore, some that they waded or swam in the shallows, and others that they were aquatic pursuit predators. One recent study provided support for the latter hypothesis using a fairly new ...

Factors associated with age-related hearing loss differ between males and females

Factors associated with age-related hearing loss differ between males and females
2024-03-06
Certain factors associated with developing age-related hearing loss differ by sex, including weight, smoking behavior, and hormone exposure, according to a study published on March 6, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Dong Woo Nam from Chungbuk National University Hospital, South Korea, and colleagues. Age-related hearing loss (ARHL), slowly-advancing difficulty in hearing high-frequency sounds, makes spoken communication more challenging, often leading to loneliness and depression. Roughly 1 in 5 people around the world suffer ...

Higher BMI is significantly associated with worse mental health, especially in women, per study of middle-aged and older adults which adjusted for lifestyle and demographic factors

Higher BMI is significantly associated with worse mental health, especially in women, per study of middle-aged and older adults which adjusted for lifestyle and demographic factors
2024-03-06
Higher BMI is significantly associated with worse mental health, especially in women, per study of middle-aged and older adults which adjusted for lifestyle and demographic factors ### Article URL:  https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0299029 Article Title: Associations between adiposity measures and depression and well-being scores: A cross-sectional analysis of middle- to older-aged adults Author Countries: Ireland Funding: This research was funded by the Irish Health Research Board, grant number: HRC/2007/13. The funder had no role in the ...

This injectable hydrogel mitigates damage to the right ventricle of the heart

This injectable hydrogel mitigates damage to the right ventricle of the heart
2024-03-06
An injectable hydrogel can mitigate damage to the right ventricle of the heart with chronic pressure overload, according to a new study published March 6 in Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Basic to Translational Science.  The study, by a research team from the University of California San Diego, Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University, was conducted in rodents. In 2019, this same hydrogel was shown to be safe in humans through an FDA-approved Phase 1 trial in people who suffered a heart attack. As a result of the new preclinical ...

Giant dinosaur was “heron from hell,” not a deep diver, says new analysis

Giant dinosaur was “heron from hell,” not a deep diver, says new analysis
2024-03-06
For years, controversy has swirled around how a Cretaceous-era, sail-backed dinosaur—the giant Spinosaurus aegyptiacus—hunted its prey. Spinosaurus was among the largest predators ever to prowl the Earth and one of the most adapted to water, but was it an aquatic denizen of the seas, diving deep to chase down its meals, or a semiaquatic wader that snatched prey from the shallows close to shore? A new analysis led by paleontologists from the University of Chicago reexamines the density ...

New deep-sea worm discovered at methane seep off Costa Rica

New deep-sea worm discovered at methane seep off Costa Rica
2024-03-06
Greg Rouse, a marine biologist at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and other researchers have discovered a new species of deep-sea worm living near a methane seep some 50 kilometers (30 miles) off the Pacific coast of Costa Rica. Rouse, curator of the Scripps Benthic Invertebrate Collection, co-authored a study describing the new species in the journal PLOS ONE that was published on March 6.  The worm, named Pectinereis strickrotti, has an elongated body that is flanked by a row of feathery, gill-tipped appendages called ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SynGAP Research Fund (SRF), dba Cure SYNGAP1, announces Board of Trustees Update 2025

Machine learning unlocks superior performance in light-driven organic crystals

Exploring the mutational landscape of colorectal cancer

Researchers have mapped the hidden control system of vision

Key to the high aggressiveness of pancreatic cancer identified

How proactive salmon conservation in the North Pacific can deliver global benefits

Blocking chemokine receptor increases effectiveness of glucocorticoids in multiple myeloma treatment

Amount of sunlight reaching Earth’s surface varies over decades, researchers report

Heart valve abnormality is associated with malignant arrhythmias

Explainable AI for ship navigation raises trust, decreases human error

Study reveals erasing inequality could prevent hundreds of adverse births annually in major UK city

No “uncanny valley” effect in science-telling AI avatars

New UNCG research shows southern shrews shrink in winter

Children exposed to brain-harming chemicals while sleeping

Emotions and levels of threat affect communities’ resilience during extreme events

New CONSORT reporting guidelines published today in five medical journals

Experts stress importance of vaccination amidst measles outbreaks

Enabling stroke victims to 'speak': $19 million toward brain implants to be built at U-M

Study captures sharp uptake in use of new weight loss and glucose-lowering medications

Van Andel Institute to recognize Dr. J. Timothy Greenamyre with 2025 Jay Van Andel Award for Outstanding Achievement in Parkinson’s Disease Research

One firearm injury was treated every 30 minutes in emergency departments in a study of 10 jurisdictions

The gut health benefits of sauerkraut

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia researchers chart natural history of patients with SCN8A-related disorders

Archaeologists measured and compared the size of 50,000 ancient houses to learn about the history of inequality -- they found that it’s not inevitable

Peptide imitation is the sincerest form of plant flattery

Archaeologists discover historical link between inequality and sustainability

Researchers develop an LSD analogue with potential for treating schizophrenia

How does our brain regulate generosity?

New study reveals wealth inequality’s deep roots in human prehistory

New archaeological database reveals links between housing and inequality in ancient world

[Press-News.org] Earliest-yet Alzheimer’s biomarker found in mouse model could point to new targets