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BEST MOLECULAR SNAPSHOT YET OF CELLS AFFECTED BY ALZHEIMER'S
While the dementia and agitation of Alzheimer's disease are painfully
obvious to care-givers, the roots of the disease lie hidden and unknown
deep in the brains of patients. Now a University of Rochester Alzheimer's
Disease Center team has developed a technology that sheds light on
the disease at its origins, in the nerve cells throughout the brain
that sicken and die. The team has taken the sharpest molecular snapshots
yet of cells affected by the disease, simultaneously measuring the
activity of 20 genes within those cells. Scientists believe these
profiles of individual cells provide the most thorough information
yet on cells from the brains of deceased Alzheimer's patients and
provide a way to compare healthy and sick cells in unprecedented detail.
The work is reported in the August 4 issue of the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. "Many Alzheimer's researchers are looking
for a molecular change in the blood, or in the spinal fluid, but that's
like looking for a needle in a haystack," says Zaven Khachaturian,
director of the Alzheimer's Association's Ronald and Nancy Reagan
Institute and former director of Alzheimer's disease research at the
National Institutes of Health. "The Rochester team is able to focus
in on cells that actually show pathology from the disease and can
compare those to cells that show no sign of disease. That is a significant
starting point toward understanding what is happening much, much earlier
in the brains of people who have this disease. It's no longer a hit-and-miss
approach. "There is good reason to be excited about this technology."
In Alzheimer's disease, nerve cells throughout the brain die -- but
not all cells, not even all the cells in any given neighborhood. Healthy
and sick cells are interspersed in the brains of the 4 million people
in the United States who have the disease, the leading cause of dementia
in the elderly. This is a class of genes that not a lot of people
have paid attention to when it comes to Alzheimer's. A few people
have looked at some of these genes individually, but no one until
now has been able to look at a more complete picture that establishes
that cell-cycle genes may be playing a significant role in the disease,"
says Coleman, a professor of neurobiology and anatomy who heads the
University's Alzheimer's Disease Center. Through statistical analysis,
the team was able to neatly divide up the cells into two camps: those
that came from patients with the disease and those that did not. "Different
cells need a different repertoire of molecules to function," says
Dr. Nienwen Chow, a member of Coleman's scientific team. "We found
a global difference in this repertoire between cells from healthy
brains and cells from brains affected by Alzheimer's disease." She
emphasizes, though, that these are early results from just a few dozen
cells from a few brains. Already the team has extended the technique,
studying nearly 100 genes simultaneously, a project moving more quickly
thanks in part to a new laser-capture micro-dissection unit purchased
recently with several other research groups and with funds from the
University Medical Center. Scientists hope that by studying thousands
of genes, they might develop ways to distinguish between healthy and
sick cells or to track the disease as it progresses. Knowing which
genes are turned on in Alzheimer's disease should also provide important
clues to more effective treatment. "By the time somebody comes into
the doctor's office and is diagnosed with the disease, the withering
of the brain has gone on for decades, " says Coleman. "We want to
be able to detect the disease before there are symptoms and halt the
progression. That's the ultimate dream." He believes the technology
can also be used to study molecular difference between healthy and
sick cells in many other disease, including heart disease, muscle
disorders, and strokes.
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