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

Potential new drug candidate found for Alzheimer's disease

2011-06-01
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of California, San Diego, the Medical University of South Carolina and American Life Science Pharmaceuticals of San Diego have demonstrated that oral administration of a cysteine protease inhibitor, E64d, not only reduces the build-up of β-amyloid (Aβ) in the brains of animal models for Alzheimer's disease, but also results in a substantial improvement in memory deficit.

A paper detailing the findings has been published as an early online version and is scheduled for publication in the September 6 issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

According to lead investigator Vivian Y. H. Hook, PhD, professor of the UCSD Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences and professor of neurosciences, pharmacology and medicine at the UCSD School of Medicine, this is major news for scientists studying Alzheimer's disease.

"The finding is especially exciting because E64d has previously been shown safe for use in humans, so we believe the compound has strong potential as a new therapy for Alzheimer's disease," said Hook.

Increased Aβ levels in the brain are associated with the development of memory loss and amyloid plaque, the hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. Aβ peptides are "cut" out from a larger protein called the amyloid precursor protein (APP) by an enzymatic "scissor" called β-secretase, and aggregate to form plaques in the brain regions responsible for memory.

E64d reduces Aβ by inhibiting the β-secretase "scissors" from "cutting" the APP chain into smaller toxic Aβ peptides. But in this study, the researchers found that the compound actually increases the activity of a protease called BACE1 which, to date, has been regarded as the primary β-secretase. Instead, E64d appears to lower brain Aβ by inhibiting the β-secretase activity of another protease, Cathepsin B.

"The study indicates Cathepsin B as a new target for therapeutic inhibition of Aβ production and subsequent improved memory function," said Hook. "This is an important finding because we show that β-secretase inhibition can occur with Cathepsin B inhibition and without BACE1 inhibition."

The researchers studied both old and young transgenic Alzheimer's disease mice, and found that memory loss improved in both. In young mice, feeding E64d prevented development of memory loss; in old mice with memory loss, it improved memory.

The study builds upon work published in March 2008 that first demonstrated that inhibitors of Cathepsin B resulted in improved memory and reduction of Aβ and amyloid plaque; but in that study, the drug was administered directly into the brains of AD mice. In the new study, oral administration of the drug was efficacious and could lead the way to clinical trials in humans.

###

Co-authors of the study were Gregory Hook, PhD, of American Life Science Pharmaceuticals in San Diego, and Mark Kindy of the Medical University of South Carolina, as well as the Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, and Applied Neurotechnology, Inc., in Charleston, SD.

G. Hook is an employee and has equity in American Life Science Pharmaceuticals (ALSP); V. Hook is chair of ALSP's scientific advisory board and holds equity in the company, and Kindy holds equity in Applied Neurotechnology, relationships disclosed to their institutions.

The study was supported in part by the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health and the Alzheimer's Drug Development Foundation.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

FRAVE: Flexible virtual reality system

FRAVE: Flexible virtual reality system
2011-06-01
Product designers harness time-consuming procedures in prototype construction. Only then are they able to assess the results of their work in a comprehensive manner. In a three-dimensional model world, they are able to do so instantly and can experience how the product fits into its natural surroundings. Design alterations can be visualized immediately, saving time and cutting the costs associated with the development process. Up to now, the so-called CAVE has been used. This consists of between three and six projection surfaces that create a walk-in space. Video projectors ...

AmericaChamber.com, the Chamber That Means Business, Announces the New Executive Board and Declares that Local, Regional and National Companies May Create a Free User Account at AmericaChamber.com

2011-06-01
The America Chamber of Commerce is pleased to announce that Jack Miller, President and CEO; Ely Miller, EVP and COO; Lorin Morar, VP Software Development were elected to the Executive Board which offers all local, regional, national and international companies to create a free user account at AmericaChamber.com. About America Chamber America Chamber was created to drive unique traffic between entrepreneurs throughout America so that they can do business with each other on a local, regional, national and international basis. We are neither a buyers club nor just a website ...

What can we do about death? Reinventing the American medical system

2011-06-01
(Garrison, NY) In a feature article in The New Republic, Daniel Callahan and Sherwin Nuland propose a radical reinvention of the American medical system requiring new ways of thinking about living, aging, and dying. They argue that a sustainable—and more humane— medical system in the U.S. will have to reprioritize to emphasize public health and prevention for the young, and care not cure for the elderly. An interesting twist on their argument, which would aim to bring everyone's life expectancy up to an average age of 80 years but give highest priority for medical treatment ...

Sleep loss lowers testosterone in healthy young men

2011-06-01
Cutting back on sleep drastically reduces a healthy young man's testosterone levels, according to a study published in the June 1 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). Eve Van Cauter, PhD, professor in medicine and director of the study, found that men who slept less than five hours a night for one week in a laboratory had significantly lower levels of testosterone than when they had a full night's sleep. Low testosterone has a host of negative consequences for young men, and not just in sexual behavior and reproduction. It is critical in building ...

Blueberry's effects on cholesterol examined in lab animal study

2011-06-01
This release is available in Spanish. Laboratory hamsters that were fed rations spiked with blueberry peels and other blueberry-juice-processing leftovers had better cholesterol health than hamsters whose rations weren't enhanced with blueberries. That's according to a study led by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) chemist Wallace H. Yokoyama. Yokoyama pointed out that further research is needed to confirm whether the effects observed in hamsters hold true for humans. He works at the Western Regional Research Center operated in Albany Calif., by the Agricultural ...

Facelift incision offers safe option for some thyroid patients

Facelift incision offers safe option for some thyroid patients
2011-06-01
AUGUSTA, Ga. – A facelift incision and robotics can help surgeons safely remove a portion of a diseased thyroid from some patients without the characteristic neck scar. Georgia Health Sciences University surgeons developed the technique utilizing the remote access capabilities of robots, experience gained from another no-neck-scar approach through the armpit and earlier success removing the largest salivary gland from the lower jaw region. "It is outpatient, it doesn't require a surgical drain and it has the advantage of no neck scar," said Dr. David Terris, Chairman ...

Commercial Carpet Cleaning and Floor Tile Maintenance Services for Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, and Corpus Christi Texas

2011-06-01
The company's expert staff is well-versed in various cleaning methods, including spot cleaning, brush cleaning, dry cleaning, bonnet cleaning, extraction and hot water extraction. The Omega Janitorial Service representative will conduct an inspection and present the client with a detailed plan of the work to be done, after which there will be a preliminary spot cleaning and deodorizing followed by the main cleaning. It's all part of Omega's system of complete commercial carpet cleaning and floor tile maintenance. Most commercial carpet cleaning services do just that ...

Gene change identifies brain cancer patients that respond better to treatment

2011-06-01
COLUMBUS, Ohio – New research proves that a change in a particular gene can identify which patients with a specific kind of brain cancer will respond better to treatment. Testing for the gene can distinguish patients with a more- or less-aggressive form of glioblastoma, the most common and an often-fatal type of primary brain cancer, and help guide therapy, the researchers say. The prospective study looked at a gene called MGMT in tumors removed from 833 glioblastoma patients. It showed that when the gene promoter is altered by a chemical change called methylation, patients ...

Vaccine increases disease-free survival for follicular lymphoma patients

Vaccine increases disease-free survival for follicular lymphoma patients
2011-06-01
HOUSTON — A lymphoma vaccine uniquely tailored for each patient extends disease-free survival by 14 months, with signs of an even better response for patients with a specific biological marker, a team led by scientists at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center reported today in the online version of Journal of Clinical Oncology. "The study continues to show that the vaccine increases the usual time until relapse for follicular lymphoma by about 14 months. That's significant because most cancer drugs are approved on the basis of extending survival only a few ...

No Such Thing as Pain and Suffering in Medical Malpractice

2011-06-01
An appeals court has recently sided with the Republican-dominated Florida legislature. The court upheld the cap on damages that injured patients can be awarded in medical malpractice cases. Specifically, the cap limits noneconomic damages - pain and suffering - to $500,000 per doctor, as reported by the Miami Herald. Looking at the issue broadly, the existence of a cap on damages arising out of harm from negligence and medical mistakes effectively discredits pain and suffering. Caps send a clear message: that there is no such thing as pain and suffering in medical malpractice ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Energy from the depths of the Earth: Collaborative research project studies temperature-induced change of rocks in geothermal reservoirs

Workplace culture, not policies, biggest factor in helping employees disclose mental health concerns: SFU study

Olympic anti-doping lab puts U.S. meat supply to the test

Study uncovers mystery of how mini sand dunes form

Study reveals vast Aztec trade networks behind ancient obsidian artifacts

Name diversity sheds light on ancient societies

Lower tackle height changing face of women’s rugby, study says

Lauren Hunt, PhD, RN, FNP, of UCSF recognized with AFAR’s Terrie Fox Wetle Rising Star Award in Health Services and Aging Research

Exploring sex differences in neurological conditions

Your fingers wrinkle in the same pattern every time you’re in the water for too long

ChatGPT helps pinpoint precise locations of seizures in the brain, aiding neurosurgeons

Addressing hearing loss may reduce isolation among the elderly

CAR-T cell therapy for cancer causes “brain fog,” Stanford Medicine-led study shows

First evidence of mother-offspring attachment types in wild chimpanzees

Mental distress among females following 2021 abortion restrictions in Texas

First-generation and low-income students in the national medical student body

U.S. children living with a parent with substance use disorder

Changes in physical and mental health after the end of SNAP emergency allotments

Drug to slow Alzheimer’s well tolerated outside of clinical trial setting

Exposome Moonshot launching in Washington D.C.

Universe decays faster than thought, but still takes a long time

City of Hope opens the largest outpatient cancer center in its national system

Astrophysicist searches for gravitational waves in new way

Must-know facts for women about heart, kidney and metabolic health

The how and why of the brain’s division across hemispheres

Wily parasite kills human cells and wears their remains as disguise

Uncovering the evolution of Hezbollah’s political communication strategy

Cell death discovery could lead to next-gen drugs for neurodegenerative conditions

The kids are hungry: Juvenile European green crabs just as damaging as adults, WSU study finds

Helping birds and floating solar energy coexist

[Press-News.org] Potential new drug candidate found for Alzheimer's disease