| What's
New:
Blocking
stress protein decreases Alzheimer's peptide in mice
By
Michael Purdy
June
4, 2007 -- Scientists revealed in November 2006 that
stress increases production in mice of a brain peptide
critical to Alzheimer's disease. Now the same group
has shown that blocking a different brain peptide slows
the stress-induced increase, opening a new door to treatment.
Researchers from Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis report the results online this week in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Studies
of humans and animals have suggested that stress may
increase risk of Alzheimer's disease, but the new research
is among the first studies to elaborate the basic biomolecular
mechanisms that may underlie this increased risk.
The
results build on earlier findings from coauthors John
G. Csernansky, M.D., the Gregory B. Couch Professor
of Psychiatry and professor of neurobiology, and Hongxin
Dong, Ph.D., instructor in psychiatry. Using mice genetically
modified to model human Alzheimer's disease, Csernansky
and Dong showed that raising them under isolated conditions
in smaller cages accelerated the deposition of brain
plaques and declines in cognitive ability.
Brain
plaques are believed to be a primary cause of the memory
loss and other mental damage inflicted by Alzheimer's
disease. They are mostly comprised of a peptide known
as amyloid beta, so researchers immediately suspected
that stress was increasing amyloid beta levels. But
because there are other factors that can accelerate
plaque build-up, they needed to test the link.
For
that new test, scientists used a technique known as
microdialysis to monitor amyloid beta levels in the
brains of mice exposed to the same stressors: isolation
and smaller cages.
"Stress
remarkably elevated soluble amyloid beta levels in the
spaces between brain cells," says senior author
David Holtzman, M.D., the Andrew B. and Gretchen P.
Jones Professor and head of the Department of Neurology.
"But we didn't know based on those initial experiments
if it was a chronic effect or a much more immediate
effect. If it was more immediate, we thought we might
be able to identify some of the brain molecules involved
in increasing the levels."
Lead
author Jea-Eun Kang, a graduate student in the Holtzman
lab, utilized a quicker way to cause stress: temporarily
restrain mice from moving. Three hours of restraint
led to a 30 percent increase in amyloid beta levels.
The
spike in amyloid beta encouraged researchers to start
looking for molecules that might be enabling this rapid
change. Stress hormones produced by the adrenal gland
were natural suspects. In mice, that meant corticosterone,
the mouse equivalent of the human hormone cortisol.
But a large dose of corticosterone didn't cause a similar
rapid change in amyloid beta levels.
When
they widened their search for molecules released in
the mouse brain by stress, the scientists identified
one called corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF), which
is linked to increased levels of brain cell communication.
In 2005, Holtzman, John Cirrito, Ph.D., a postdoctoral
research associate in neurology and psychiatry, and
colleagues showed that increased communication between
brain cells also contributed to increased amyloid beta.
When
they directly placed CRF in the mouse brain, amyloid
beta levels rose immediately. Mice given a CRF blocker
and then stressed did not display increased amyloid
beta.
"There
are very few known environmental risk factors for Alzheimer's
disease," Holtzman notes. "Head trauma increases
risk, higher education lowers it. Stress may be another
environmental factor that increases risk."
Holtzman,
Csernansky and their colleagues are intrigued by the
possibility that drugs that block CRF or reduce anxiety
may provide a new way to decrease amyloid beta and eventually
delay or prevent Alzheimer's disease. Holtzman and his
colleagues are also continuing to explore connections
between brain cell activity and amyloid beta levels.
The
studies were carried out in the Hope Center for Neurological
Disorders and in conjunction with the Alzheimer's Disease
Research Center, both at Washington University School
of Medicine.
Kang
J-E, Cirrito JR, Dong H, Csernansky JG, Holtzman DM.
Acute stress increases interstitial fluid amyloid-beta
via corticotropin-releasing factor and neuronal activity.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, electronic
edition, June 4, 2007.
Funding
from the National Institute on Aging of the National
Institutes of Health, the Alzheimer's Association, the
Cure Alzheimer's Fund and Eli Lilly supported this research.
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