• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Alzheimer's brain plaques cleared in mice

Fri May 30, 2008 1:25pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Protein accumulations, or plaques, characteristic of Alzheimer's disease can be eliminated from the brains of mice, researchers report, by encouraging scavenger immune cells called macrophages to do their work.

Health

The activity of macrophages is damped down by a naturally occurring compound called TGF-beta, to stop runaway reactions, and prior research has shown that brain levels of TGF-beta are increased in patients with Alzheimer's disease, according to the report in the research journal Nature Medicine.

Some researchers believed that the high levels of TGF-beta were simply an attempt to quiet the inflammatory response associated with Alzheimer plaques. However, the new findings contradict that notion.

The researchers genetically engineered mice to block TGF-beta signaling in macrophages in the peripheral circulation. They found that this "promotes the influx of these cells into brains of Alzheimer's mice," lead author Dr. Terrence Town, from Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, told Reuters Health.

Remarkably, "this peripheral macrophage brain infiltration was actually therapeutic in these Alzheimer's mice," he said. "This surprised us because others have hypothesized that increasing immune responses in the brain may be deleterious by promoting inflammation, which can injure brain cells."

Up to 90 percent of brain plaques were eliminated in the genetically engineered mice, and the animals showed functional improvements, such as enhanced maze navigation.

"If our results translate to humans, it may be possible to administer a TGF-beta pathway blocking drug to the periphery, which would mobilize the peripheral macrophages to enter the brain and remove the senile plaques that build up in the brains of Alzheimer patients," Town said.

In line with this goal, he said, his team is now investigating drugs, rather than genetic strategies, that block TGF-beta.

SOURCEL: Nature Medicine, advance online issue May 30, 2008.



More from Reuters

Photo

Honda expands airbag recall as more Toyotas probed

TOKYO/DETROIT (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co said it would recall another 440,000 cars around the world for faulty airbags as rival Toyota Motor Corp faced further probes over its largest-ever safety crisis. | Video

A worker walks on steel frames at a construction site in central Beijing January 27, 2010. REUTERS/Loic Hofstedt
Analysis:

China's boom may lead to bust

The housing market is becoming the investment of choice for the Chinese, which is making policymakers very nervous.  Full Article