Highly-toxic protein behind Alzheimer's disease identified by scientists

by The Press AssociationA highly-toxic protein described as the "real bad guy" behind Alzheimer's disease has been identified by scientists.The molecule recruits other less harmful proteins and makes them deadly to brain cells, according to research published in the online edition of the journal Nature. Knowing how it forms and behaves is expected to lead to more effective Alzheimer's treatments. One experimental drug to emerge from the research has already completed early phase I clinical trials.The protein is a special type of beta-amyloid, which was already known to play a key role in Alzheimer's. Beta-amyloid clumps together in the brains of Alzheimer's patients, forming deposits that result in the destruction of nerve cells."This form of beta-amyloid, called pyroglutamylated (or pyroglu) beta-amyloid, is a real bad guy in Alzheimer's disease," said lead scientist Professor George Bloom, from the University of Virginia in the United States."We've confirmed that it converts more abundant beta-amyloids into a form that is up to 100 times more toxic, making this a very dangerous killer of brain cells and an attractive target for drug therapy."He compared the way the protein spread destruction in the brain to the transmission of prion diseases, such as Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease (CJD). Prion diseases are caused by rogue misshapen proteins that toxify other proteins they come into contact with in a chain reaction."You might think of this pyroglu beta-amyloid as a seed that can further contaminate something that's already bad into something much worse - it's the trigger," said Prof Bloom.Co-author Dr Hans-Ulrich Demuth, chief scientific officer at the German biotech company Probiodrug, said: "This publication further adds significant evidence to our hypothesis about the critical role pyroglu beta-amyloid plays in the initiation of Alzheimer's disease."Probiodrug, based in Halle, has completed phase I safety trials of a drug that suppresses an enzyme involved in the formation of pyroglu beta-amyloid.

Previous
Previous

No Proof Alzheimer’s Smell Test Works

Next
Next

Alzheimer's Drug Fails to Reduce Significant Agitation