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

TTUHSC researchers find blood-brain barrier remains resilient in Alzheimer’s disease model

2025-09-29
(Press-News.org)

A team of scientists at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (TTUHSC) has published new evidence suggesting that the brain’s protective shield — known as the blood-brain barrier (BBB) — remains largely intact in a commonly used mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease. The discovery challenges long-standing assumptions that Alzheimer’s disease causes the BBB to “leak,” potentially reshaping how researchers think about drug delivery for the disease.

The study, published July 23 in Fluids and Barriers of the CNS, was conducted by a research team from the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and the Brain Drug Discovery Center at TTUHSC’s Jerry H. Hodge School of Pharmacy in Amarillo, and from the TTUHSC Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Ulrich Bickel, M.D., was principal investigator and senior author, and Ehsan Nozohouri, a TTUHSC graduate research assistant, was lead author. Co-authors include TTUHSC graduate researchers Behnam Noorani, Dhavalkumar Patel, Yeseul Ahn and Sumaih Zoubi.

Alzheimer’s disease is known for memory loss and cognitive decline. In the brain, it is marked by amyloid-beta plaques and tau tangles. For decades, scientists have also debated whether Alzheimer’s disease damages the BBB — the tightly linked endothelial cells lining the inner surface of brain blood vessels that act as a security gate, blocking harmful substances while letting in essential nutrients by specific transporters.

“The BBB excludes 99% of large molecules, like proteins, and over 95% of smaller ones, including many drugs,” Nozohouri explained. “That’s why understanding whether it stays intact in Alzheimer’s is critical, especially for developing effective treatments.”

To explore this question, Nozohouri and colleagues used Tg2576 mice, a well-studied model of Alzheimer’s disease that forms amyloid plaques. The team injected the mice with a harmless test molecule, [¹³C₁₂]sucrose, which normally crosses the BBB very poorly. Using highly sensitive analytical tools (liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry, or LC-MS/MS) and advanced tissue-sampling methods (laser microdissection), they tracked whether sucrose leaked into different brain regions. Their key findings include:

No major leakage detected: Sucrose levels in the brain remained extremely low in both Alzheimer’s and healthy control mice, both at young and old ages, suggesting an intact barrier. Stable across regions: Critical brain regions involved in memory and cognition showed no differences between groups. Structure preserved: Even around amyloid plaques, tight junction proteins — the “mortar” sealing BBB cells together — remained mostly unaffected.

Together, these results indicate that while small, localized changes may occur near plaques, the BBB as a whole retains its protective function in this model.

“Our findings challenge the assumption of widespread BBB leakiness in Alzheimer’s disease,” Nozohouri said. “This means that drug delivery strategies may need to be designed with the understanding that the barrier is not broadly compromised.”

While the Tg2576 mouse model provides valuable insights, Nozohouri emphasized the need for additional models that more closely replicate human physiology. There are drugs known as monoclonal antibodies that have been approved by FDA, and they show some ability to slow down cognition decline.

As a next step in their research, Nozohouri said the team could study the rodent version of the approved monoclonal antibodies to determine if there are any possible leakages caused by microhemorrhages or brain swelling that potentially could cause the leakage at the blood brain barrier.

“We still have much to learn about how Alzheimer’s disease impacts the brain’s defenses,” he said. “Our ultimate goal is to better predict how drugs behave in patients, so we can design therapies that truly work.”

 

###

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Scalable and efficient quantum error correction for fault-tolerant quantum computing

2025-09-29
A new class of highly efficient and scalable quantum low-density parity-check error correction codes, capable of performance approaching the theoretical hashing bound, has been developed by scientists at Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan. These novel error-correction codes can handle quantum codes with hundreds of thousands of qubits, potentially enabling large-scale fault-tolerant quantum computing, with applications in diverse fields, including quantum chemistry and optimization problems. In recent years, quantum computers have begun to handle double-digit quantum bits, or qubits. However, many essential applications targeted by quantum computers, such as quantum chemistry, ...

Japan’s national standardized health checkup program: impacts on self-employed and unemployed populations

2025-09-29
Rapidly aging populations and rising cases of lifestyle-related diseases (LRDs), like diabetes and hypertension, are driving significant financial strain on government budgets. While regular health checkups under a standardized government program can be a solution, it is not well understood how these initiatives benefit different socioeconomic sections of the society and their economic feasibility. Most studies have documented how health checkup programs affect salaried or employed workers, examining the program’s role in informing individuals about their health status and risks. However, ...

APSS accepting sleep and circadian research abstracts and session proposals for SLEEP 2026 in Baltimore

2025-09-29
DARIEN, IL – The Associated Professional Sleep Societies is accepting research abstracts and session proposal submissions for SLEEP 2026, the 40th annual meeting of the APSS, which will be held June 14 to 17 at the Baltimore Convention Center. Research abstracts will be accepted for oral and poster presentations in two tracks: basic and translational sleep and circadian science and clinical sleep science and practice. Accepted abstracts will be published online in a supplement of the journal Sleep. The APSS Program Committee is also accepting proposals for postgraduate courses and other sessions including bench-to-bedside sessions, clinical workshops, discussion ...

Startling images show how antibiotic pierces bacteria’s armor

2025-09-29
A team led by UCL (University College London) and Imperial College London researchers has shown for the first time how life-saving antibiotics called polymyxins pierce the armour of harmful bacteria. The findings, published in the journal Nature Microbiology, could lead to new treatments for bacterial infections – especially urgent since drug-resistant infections already kill more than a million people a year. Polymyxins were discovered more than 80 years ago and are used as a last-resort treatment for infections caused ...

Patients with intellectual and developmental disabilities substantially over-represented among long-stay psychiatric inpatients

2025-09-29
Toronto, ON, September 29, 2025 – Individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) account for more than one in five patients who have been in Ontario’s mental health beds for over a year, according to a new study from researchers at ICES and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). The findings suggest that people with IDD have different support needs compared with patients without IDD as they are more likely to have moderate or severe cognitive impairment, difficulty caring for themselves, and few social supports, which may contribute to challenges transitioning out of hospital and into the community. Enhancing specialized ...

AI distinguishes glioblastoma from look-alike cancers during surgery

2025-09-29
At a glance: Correctly distinguishing between look-alike tumors found in the brain during surgery can guide critical decisions in real time while patient is still in the operating room. A new AI tool outperformed humans and other models in distinguishing glioblastoma from another type of cancer that appears similar under a microscope. The new AI tool has a built-in uncertainty feature that flags tumors the model has not encountered before and marks them for human review. A Harvard Medical School–led research team has developed an AI tool that can reliably tell apart two look-alike cancers found in the ...

Many older adults – especially Gen X women – show signs of addiction to ultra-processed foods

2025-09-29
They were the first generation of Americans to grow up with ultra-processed foods all around them – products typically loaded with extra fat, salt, sugar and flavorings. They were children and young adults at a time when such products, designed to maximize their appeal, proliferated. Now, a study shows, 21% of women and 10% of men in Generation X and the tail end of the Baby Boom generation, now in their 50s and early 60s, meet criteria for addiction to these ultra-processed foods. That rate is far higher than it is among ...

Simple test can predict risk of severe liver disease

2025-09-29
A new study from Karolinska Institutet, published in the scientific journal The BMJ, shows how a simple blood analysis can predict the risk of developing severe liver disease. The method may already start to be applied in primary care to enable the earlier detection of cirrhosis and cancer of the liver. “These are diseases that are growing increasingly common and that have a poor prognosis if detected late,” says Rickard Strandberg, affiliated researcher at Karolinska Institutet’s Department of Medicine in ...

RSV vaccines safe and effective, Cochrane review finds

2025-09-29
The review demonstrates that vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are both safe and effective in protecting groups who are most at risk for serious illness, including older adults and infants.   RSV is a common virus that causes coughs and colds but can also lead to life-threatening lung infections like pneumonia. Children under the age of two months are at the highest risk of severe RSV infection and death, with older adults also vulnerable to severe disease.   An international group of researchers analysed 14 ...

Unplanned, premature, out-of-hospital births pose challenges for emergency team

2025-09-28
Vienna, Austria: The first detailed analysis of unplanned births that occurred outside the hospital setting in Austria has shown that, although such deliveries are rare, they pose challenges for emergency teams that attend, especially if babies are born prematurely [1]. In a study presented at the European Emergency Medicine Congress today (Monday), the researchers found that between 2017 and 2024 there were 173 unplanned, out-of-hospital births in the Styria region of Austria, of which 16 (9%) were premature (less than 37 weeks’ gestation). The most premature ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pandemic ‘beneath the surface’ has been quietly wiping out sea urchins around the world

Tea linked to stronger bones in older women, while coffee may pose risks

School feeding programs lead to modest but meaningful results

Researchers develop AI Tool to identify undiagnosed Alzheimer's cases while reducing disparities

Seaweed based carbon catalyst offers metal free solution for removing antibiotics from water

Simple organic additive supercharges UV treatment of “forever chemical” PFOA

£13m NHS bill for ‘mismanagement’ of menstrual bleeds

The Lancet Psychiatry: Slow tapering plus therapy most effective strategy for stopping antidepressants, finds major meta-analysis

Body image issues in adolescence linked to depression in adulthood

Child sexual exploitation and abuse online surges amid rapid tech change; new tool for preventing abuse unveiled for path forward

Dragon-slaying saints performed green-fingered medieval miracles, new study reveals

New research identifies shared genetic factors between addiction and educational attainment

Epilepsy can lead to earlier deaths in people with intellectual disabilities, study shows

Global study suggests the underlying problems of ECT patients are often ignored

Mapping ‘dark’ regions of the genome illuminates how cells respond to their environment

ECOG-ACRIN and Caris Life Sciences unveil first findings from a multi-year collaboration to advance AI-powered multimodal tools for breast cancer recurrence risk stratification

Satellite data helps UNM researchers map massive rupture of 2025 Myanmar earthquake

Twisting Spins: Florida State University researchers explore chemical boundaries to create new magnetic material

Mayo Clinic researchers find new hope for toughest myeloma through off-the-shelf immunotherapy

Cell-free DNA Could Detect Adverse Events from Immunotherapy

American College of Cardiology announces Fuster Prevention Forum

AAN issues new guideline for the management of functional seizures

Could GLP-1 drugs affect risk of epilepsy for people with diabetes?

New circoviruses discovered in pilot whales and orcas from the North Atlantic 

Study finds increase in risk of binge drinking among 12th graders who use 2 or more cannabis products

New paper-based technology could transform cancer drug testing

Opioids: clarifying the concept of safe supply to save lives

New species of tiny pumpkin toadlet discovered in Brazil highlights need for conservation in the mountain forests of Serra do Quiriri

Reciprocity matters--people were more supportive of climate policies in their country if they believed other countries were making significant efforts themselves

Stanford Medicine study shows why mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis

[Press-News.org] TTUHSC researchers find blood-brain barrier remains resilient in Alzheimer’s disease model