Brain Protein May Have Potential Against Alzheimer's

Study in animals finds memory improvements and less cell degeneration

Posted: February 8, 2009

SUNDAY, Feb. 8 (HealthDay News) -- A naturally occurring brain protein appears able to slow or stop Alzheimer's disease in recent studies done on animal models.

The brain's entorhinal cortex, which supports memory, normally produces brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF); however, its production appears to decrease when Alzheimer's is present. When researchers injected BDNF in lab animals that either were aged, had entorhinal cortex damage or were genetically altered to have Alzheimer's-like symptoms, they found that the animals had improved memory and cognitive skills and that cell degeneration and death was prevented or reversed.

"The effects of BDNF were potent," researcher Dr. Mark Tuszynski, professor of neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine, said in a news release issued by the school. "When we administered BDNF to memory circuits in the brain, we directly stimulated their activity and prevented cell death from the underlying disease."

The animals receiving the treatment -- transgenic mouse models of Alzheimer's disease, aged rats, rats with induced damage to the entorhinal cortex, aged rhesus monkeys and monkeys with entorhinal cortex damage -- also showed long-term benefits. They began producing more BDNF on their own and exhibited better brain cell signaling and neuronal function, whereas the untreated animals degenerated further. The hippocampus, the brain's short-term memory processing center, which Alzheimer's disease can quickly damage, also appeared to show improvement.

The team, whose findings were published in the Feb. 8 issue of Nature Medicine, concluded that, since BDNF appeared both safe and effective on animal models, it could hold hope for treating Alzheimer's disease in humans.

"In this series of studies, we have shown that BDNF targets the cortical cells themselves, preventing their death, stimulating their function and improving learning and memory," Tuszynski said. "Thus, BDNF treatment can potentially provide long-lasting protection by slowing, or even stopping, disease progression in the cortical regions that receive treatment."

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke has more about Alzheimer's disease.

Trials For Patients

My sister was diagnosed with Alzheimer's two years ago at the age of 49 although her symptons were showing a couple of years before that. She had to quit her job of 10 years (accountant), sell her house, quit driving and move back home with my parents who are in their mid 70's.

This is the most exciting breakthrough I have heard about since she was diagnosed. I pray every day that a cure will be found. She has been on one trial for a very short time and it did not go well.

I hope trials on humans will start soon with this latest discovery. I do not think people get it that this is not just an "elderly" disease anymore.

Thanks to the discoverers for all of their time and hard work.

Tamara Borak of TX @ Feb 26, 2009 12:58:00 PM

BDNF and Alzheimer's

This is very exciting and encouraging info. I hope they are rapidly pursuing research on humans. I wonder if the injections were daily, monthly, etc. and into what part of the body--or brain. I'll look up the details on this research as it is important to me to help my 91 yr old Dad as well as myself and sister who may be at risk for this if it is truly genetically related. Our family is long-lived and several of them have developed some form of dementia around 90. I look forward to future studies of this as a therapy.

Linda Pringle of TX @ Feb 14, 2009 14:48:14 PM

Very interested in Human side

My mother is 56 and has been severely ravaged by Alzheimer’s. She is one of the rare early onset cases. She no longer has the ability to use real words, and in fact goes to a day care during the day, and my father brings her home each night.

This is really rare and looking back on documents she had written and various moments she probably began getting ill around the age of 38-40. The issue with someone like my mother is she is very active Alzheimer's because of her age, which can be dangerous for her since she has no understanding of what is going on anymore, but has the ability to move and get around like a 56 year old.

I would love to hear that there is human testing being done because we would love the opportunity to try and see if there is a difference. Especially because I am 25 and my sister is 27 and we both have a 50/50 chance that we inherited the gene that causes the early onset disease. Great work and we are so excited for this breakthrough!

Glynn of TX @ Feb 12, 2009 12:20:43 PM

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