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United States Senators Barbara
Mikulski and Kit Bond with actor David Hyde
Pierce at a conference to promote awareness of Alzheimer's
Disease
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Last March, researchers at UCLA
reported the development of a molecular compound called CLR01 that
prevented toxic proteins associated with Parkinson's disease from
binding together and killing the brain's neurons.
And what they've found is encouraging.
Using the same compound, which they've dubbed a "molecular
tweezer," in a living mouse model of Alzheimer's, the
researchers demonstrated for the first time that the compound safely
crossed the blood–brain barrier, cleared the existing amyloid-beta
and tau aggregates, and also proved to be protective to the neurons'
synapses — another target of the disease — which allow cells to
communicate with one another.
The report appears in the current
online edition of the journal Brain.
"This is the first demonstration
that molecular tweezers work in a mammalian animal model," said
Gal Bitan, an associate professor of neurology at UCLA and the senior
author of the study. "Importantly, no signs of toxicity were
observed in the treated mice. The efficacy and toxicity results
support the mechanism of this molecular tweezer and suggest these are
promising compounds for developing disease-modifying therapies for
Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's and other disorders."
Molecular tweezers are complex
molecular compounds capable of binding to other proteins. Shaped like
the letter "C," these compounds wrap around chains of
lysine, a basic amino acid that is a constituent of most proteins.
Bitan and his colleagues, including Aida Attar, first author of the
study and a graduate student in Bitan's lab, have been working with a
particular molecular tweezer called CLR01.
In collaboration with scientists at the
Università Cattolica in Rome, the researchers, working first in cell
cultures, found that CLR01 effectively inhibited a process known as
synaptotoxicity, in which clumps of toxic amyloid damage or destroy a
neuron's synapses.
Even though synapses in transgenic mice
with Alzheimer's may shut down and the mice may lose their memory,
upon treatment, they form new synapses and regain their learning and
memory abilities.
"For humans, unfortunately, the
situation is more problematic because the neurons gradually die in
Alzheimer's disease," Bitan said. "That's why we must start
treating as early as possible. The good news is that the molecular
tweezers appear to have a high safety margin, so they may be suitable
for prophylactic treatment starting long before the onset of the
disease."
Next, using a radioactive "label,"
the researchers were able to confirm that the compound had crossed
the mouse's blood–brain barrier and was effective in clearing the
brain of amyloid-beta and tau aggregates.
"This work shows that molecular
tweezers do a number of things — they help to ameliorate multiple
pathologic features of Alzheimer's, including amyloid plaques,
neurofibrillary tangles and brain inflammation, and our cell culture
experiments demonstrated that molecular tweezers block the toxic
effect of amyloid-beta on synaptic integrity and communication,"
Bitan said.
"We call these unique tweezers
'process-specific,' rather than the common protein-specific
inhibitors," he added, meaning the compound only attacks the
targeted toxic aggregates and not normal body processes. "That's
a big deal, because it helps confirm evidence that the molecular
tweezers can be used safely, ultimately supporting their development
as a therapy for humans."
The next step, Bitan hopes, is to
confirm that the tweezers improve memory and not just brain
pathology. The researchers say they are working on this question and
already have encouraging preliminary data.
There were multiple authors on the
study in addition to Bitan and Attar. Please see the study for the
complete list.
The work was supported by the UCLA Jim
Easton Consortium for Alzheimer's Drug Discovery and Biomarker
Development; American Health Assistance Foundation grant A2008-350;
RJG Foundation grant 20095024; a Cure Alzheimer's Fund grant;
individual pre-doctoral National Research Service Award 1F31AG037283;
National Institute of Health grant R01AG021975; and a Veteran's
Administration Merit Award.
The UCLA Department of Neurology, with
over 100 faculty members, encompasses more than 20 disease-related
research programs, along with large clinical and teaching programs.
These programs cover brain mapping and neuroimaging, movement
disorders, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, neurogenetics,
nerve and muscle disorders, epilepsy, neuro-oncology, neurotology,
neuropsychology, headaches and migraines, neurorehabilitation, and
neurovascular disorders. The department ranks in the top two among
its peers nationwide in National Institutes of Health funding.
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