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February
24, 2005
Traffic Jam On Axon Highway Occurs Early In Alzheimer’s
By Sue Pondrom
A blockage of
the movement of chemical supplies and signals within the tube-shaped,
brain-to-body cellular highways called axons appears to occur
much earlier than previously thought in the development of Alzheimer’s
disease, according to research by the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine. The finding could lead
to earlier diagnosis and may also provide insight into the causes
of Alzheimer’s, a progressive, memory-robbing brain disorder
affecting some 4.5 million Americans.
Published in the February
25, 2005 issue of the journal Science, the study was
conducted in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease and with
brain tissue from human Alzheimer’s patients who had died
when their disease was in its early stages.
The researchers found
that abnormal amounts of proteins, organelles and vesicles had
clogged up the axons – like a rock in a garden hose –
in mouse models of Alzheimer’s almost a year before other
disease-related symptoms were noted, and in the human tissue
of early Alzheimer’s patients.
Axons are the long
cellular highways that connect brain cells to each other and
that carry electrical signals and chemical supplies throughout
the brain. Axons extend long distances to their end points,
called synapses; nerve impulses are transmitted via the axons
so that thought, perception, memory, and learning can occur.
Axons also extend to tissue such as muscle so that movements
can be controlled by the brain. Although scientists have known
that the transportation process within axons appeared blocked
in late-stage Alzheimer’s patients, this study provides
the first evidence that the process occurs early, perhaps even
before the clinical signs of the disease are noticeable.
The findings also provide
the first evidence of a mechanistic link between the two pathologies
characteristic of Alzheimer’s brain tissue – twisted,
insoluble brain fibers called neurofibrillary tangles, and amyloid
plaques, which are excessive accumulation of protein fragments
that the body produces normally. Previously, scientists have
been unable to determine the molecular relationship between
these two different characteristics.
“Proteins
in both the tangles and plaque appear to be involved in transportation
of materials within the axons,” said the study’s
senior author Lawrence S.B. Goldstein, a UCSD professor of cellular
and molecular medicine and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator. “Tau, the protein in neurofibrillary tangles,
is a protein that appears to regulate traffic within axons.
Blockage within axons may promote the generation of excess amyloid
beta, the protein in amyloid plaques.”
When the scientists
evaluated the contents of axonal blockages, they found accumulations
of haphazardly arranged vesicles, mitochondria and other organelles.
Also prominent was an accumulation of kinesin-1, a protein that
acts like a miniature truck to carry molecular cargo through
the axons. An additional experiment showed that even a small
reduction of kinesin is sufficient to impair axonal transport
and promote abnormal amounts of amyloid beta.
“Our evidence
suggests that axonal blockage does not form in response to amyloid
deposition,” Goldstein said. “Rather, blockage seems
to occur prior to amyloid deposition and other disease-related
pathology. Thus, our findings suggest that axonal transport
deficits play an early and potentially causative role in Alzheimer’s
disease.”
The study was funded
by the National Institutes of Health, the Ellison Medical Foundation,
the Pew Foundation, the Boehringer-Ingelheim Fonds and the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute. Additional authors included first
author Gorazd B. Stokin, UCSD Department of Cellular and Molecular
Medicine; and Concepcion Lillo, and David Williams, Ph.D., UCSD
Department of Pharmacology; Tomas L. Falzone, Richard G. Brusch,
and Stephanie L. Mount, UCSD Department of Cellular and Molecular
Medicine; Edward Rockenstein, UCSD Department of Neurosciences;
Rema Raman, UCSD Department of Family and Preventive Medicine;
Peter Davies, Department of Pathology, Albert Einstein College
of Medicine; and Eliezer Masliah, M.D., UCSD Departments of
Neurosciences and Pathology.
Media Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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