| What's
New:
Molecular
drug pump may help reduce risk of Alzheimer's
By
Michael Purdy
Oct.
20, 2005 — A molecule that has long been an obstacle
to cancer chemotherapy and drug treatments for brain
disorders may soon become an ally in the fight against
Alzheimer's disease, according to researchers at Washington
University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the University
of Rochester.
In
studies in genetically modified mice, scientists found
that the molecule, P-glycoprotein (Pgp), accelerates
clearance from the brain of amyloid beta (A-beta) peptide,
the primary component of the plaques that are the hallmark
of Alzheimer's disease.
According
to scientists, the new link is potent and intriguing
enough to suggest several potential follow-up studies,
including investigations of how pharmaceuticals might
affect Alzheimer's risk by altering Pgp activity levels.
"We
would never claim that Pgp activity is the single critical
causative factor in Alzheimer's disease, just like there
isn't any single cause of heart attacks, hypertension
or cancer," says author David Holtzman, M.D., the
Andrew B. and Gretchen P. Jones Professor and head of
the Department of Neurology. "But our evidence
suggests that it may be one of the more significant
risk factors so far identified."
The
Journal of Clinical Investigations will publish their
results online on Oct. 20.
Scientists
are already familiar with a variety of drugs that can
promote and suppress Pgp activity. The new connection
may, for example, explain a puzzling study that suggested
the antibiotic rifampin could slow the decline of patients
with mild to moderate Alzheimer's.
"That
result didn't seem to be linked to the drug's antibiotic
properties, and now we have a much more appealing explanation:
rifampin is a known inducer of Pgp activity," says
co-author David Piwnica-Worms, M.D., Ph.D., professor
of molecular biology and pharmacology and of radiology
at Washington University. "Researchers will likely
be evaluating this drug and other known Pgp promoters
as potential ways to reduce risk."
Several
drugs regularly prescribed over extended periods of
time are also known to suppress Pgp activity. These
drugs include some calcium channel blockers, immune
suppression drugs and anti-depressants. Such compounds
may need to be reevaluated for potential effects on
long-term risk of Alzheimer's disease.
Scientists
emphasized that the pharmaceuticals that suppress Pgp
have confirmed medical benefits, while their potential
to increase Alzheimer's risk is still tentative and
unconfirmed. They strongly urged against any thought
of stopping a prescription on the basis of their study
alone.
"The
decision to begin or stop a pharmaceutical treatment
must always be based on an assessment of benefits and
risks," says Holtzman. "We identified the
possibility of an increase in risk, but detailed human
studies are necessary before that risk can even be confirmed,
let alone weighed against the benefits conferred by
these drugs."
When
German scientists published in vitro evidence in 2000
that Pgp might transport A-beta, the labs of Holtzman
and Piwnica-Worms independently read the findings. Pgp
is one of several molecular transporters that form the
blood-brain barrier, a layer of cells that strictly
limits the ability of many types of molecules —including
many pharmaceuticals — to enter the brain via the circulatory
system.
At
the time, Holtzman and other Alzheimer's researchers
had been seeing evidence that something might be helping
A-beta get out of the brain after it was produced there.
"Everything
that's in the spaces between the cells of the brain
can get out passively, but the A-beta peptide appeared
to be getting out of the brain at a high speed that
was consistent with it being helped out of the brain
by other mechanisms," he explains.
Meanwhile,
Piwnica-Worms' lab had spent more than a decade studying
Pgp's role in resistance to chemotherapy.
"When
tumor cells make Pgp, they can use it to pump cancer
chemotherapy agents out of themselves and increase their
chances of surviving the chemotherapy," explains
Piwnica-Worms.
John
R. Cirrito, a student in Holtzman's lab, contacted Piwnica-Worms
about the potential overlap, and the two labs combined
their expertise to study whether Pgp transports A-beta
out of the brain. In one test, Cirrito, the lead author
of the paper, crossbred genetically engineered mouse
models used in each lab. The first mouse model, used
by Piwnica-Worms' group, lacks the gene that makes Pgp.
The second, used by Holtzman's group, has an inserted
human gene, APP, that makes it develop a condition similar
to Alzheimer's disease.
Once
he had established a line of mice that lacked Pgp but
had the APP gene, Cirrito compared them to a control
group that was born at the same time but only had the
APP gene. When they were older, the mice who lacked
Pgp had approximately three times as much A-beta buildup
in their brains as the APP mice.
"This
shows that if Pgp is not working properly over the course
of months, it can actually impact the pathology of Alzheimer's
disease," Holtzman says.
Working
with scientists in the laboratory of Berislav Zlokovic,
MD, PhD, professor of neurosurgery at the University
of Rochester, researchers injected A-beta labeled with
a radioactive tag directly into the mouse brains. After
30 minutes, mice lacking Pgp had cleared less of the
labeled A-beta from their brains.
In
another test, Cirrito sampled the cerebral fluid at
various points in mouse brains. He showed that when
the mice were given a drug that inhibits Pgp activity,
A-beta levels increased.
Cirrito
JR, Deane R, Fagan AM, Spinner ML, Parsadanian M, Finn
MB, Jiang H, Prior JL, Sagare A, Bales KR, Paul SM,
Zlokovic BV, Piwnica-Worms D, Holtzman DM. P-glycoprotein
deficiency at the blood-brain barrier increases amyloid-b
deposition in an Alzheimer's disease mouse model. Journal
of Clinical Investigation, online publication, Oct.
20, 2005.
Funding
from the National Institute on Aging, the National Cancer
Institute and the U.S. Department of Energy supported
this research.
Washington
University School of Medicine's full-time and volunteer
faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish
and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine
is one of the leading medical research, teaching and
patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked
third in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.
Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St.
Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is
linked to BJC HealthCare.
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