
For the first time, researchers have used human data to quantify the speed of different processes that lead to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and found that it develops in a very different way than previously thought. Their results could have important implications for the development of potential treatments.
For the first time, researchers have used human data to quantify the speed of different processes that lead to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and found that it develops in a very different way than previously thought. Their results could have important implications for the development of potential treatments.
This research shows the value of working with human data instead of imperfect animal models
Tuomas Knowles
探花直播international team, led by the 探花直播 of Cambridge, found that instead of starting from a single point in the brain and initiating a chain reaction which leads to the death of brain cells, Alzheimer鈥檚 disease reaches different regions of the brain early. How quickly the disease kills cells in these regions, through the production of toxic protein clusters, limits how quickly the disease progresses overall.
探花直播researchers used post-mortem brain samples from Alzheimer鈥檚 patients, as well as PET scans from living patients, who ranged from those with mild cognitive impairment to those with late-stage Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, to track the aggregation of tau, one of two key proteins implicated in the condition.
In Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, tau and another protein called amyloid-beta build up into tangles and plaques 鈥 known collectively as aggregates 鈥 causing brain cells to die and the brain to shrink. This results in memory loss, personality changes and difficulty carrying out daily functions.
By combining five different datasets and applying them to the same mathematical model, the researchers observed that the mechanism controlling the rate of progression in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease is the replication of aggregates in individual regions of the brain, and not the spread of aggregates from one region to another.
探花直播, reported in the journal Science Advances, open up new ways of understanding the progress of Alzheimer鈥檚 and other neurodegenerative diseases, and new ways that future treatments might be developed.
For many years, the processes within the brain which result in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease have been described using terms like 鈥榗ascade鈥 and 鈥榗hain reaction鈥. It is a difficult disease to study, since it develops over decades, and a definitive diagnosis can only be given after examining samples of brain tissue after death.
For years, researchers have relied largely on animal models to study the disease. Results from mice suggested that Alzheimer鈥檚 disease spreads quickly, as the toxic protein clusters colonise different parts of the brain.
鈥 探花直播thinking had been that Alzheimer鈥檚 develops in a way that鈥檚 similar to many cancers: the aggregates form in one region and then spread through the brain,鈥 said Dr Georg Meisl from Cambridge鈥檚 Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, the paper鈥檚 first author. 鈥淏ut instead, we found that when Alzheimer鈥檚 starts there are already aggregates in multiple regions of the brain, and so trying to stop the spread between regions will do little to slow the disease.鈥
This is the first time that human data has been used to track which processes control the development of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease over time. It was made possible in part by the chemical kinetics approach developed at Cambridge over the last decade which allows the processes of aggregation and spread in the brain to be modelled, as well as advances in PET scanning and improvements in the sensitivity of other brain measurements.
鈥淭his research shows the value of working with human data instead of imperfect animal models,鈥 said co-senior author Professor Tuomas Knowles, also from the Department of Chemistry. 鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting to see the progress in this field 鈥 fifteen years ago, the basic molecular mechanisms were determined for simple systems in a test tube by us and others; but now we鈥檙e able to study this process at the molecular level in real patients, which is an important step to one day developing treatments.鈥
探花直播researchers found that the replication of tau aggregates is surprisingly slow 鈥 taking up to five years. 鈥淣eurons are surprisingly good at stopping aggregates from forming, but we need to find ways to make them even better if we鈥檙e going to develop an effective treatment,鈥 said co-senior author Professor Sir David Klenerman, from the UK Dementia Research Institute at the 探花直播 of Cambridge. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fascinating how biology has evolved to stop the aggregation of proteins.鈥
探花直播researchers say their methodology could be used to help the development of treatments for Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, which affects an estimated 44 million people worldwide, by targeting the most important processes that occur when humans develop the disease. In addition, the methodology could be applied to other neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson鈥檚 disease. 听
鈥 探花直播key discovery is that stopping the replication of aggregates rather than their propagation is going to be more effective at the stages of the disease that we studied,鈥 said Knowles.
探花直播researchers are now planning to look at the earlier processes in the development of the disease, and extend the studies to other diseases such as Frontal temporal dementia, traumatic brain injury and progressive supranuclear palsy where tau aggregates are also formed during disease.
探花直播study is a collaboration between researchers at the UK Dementia Research Institute, the 探花直播 of Cambridge and Harvard Medical School. Funding is acknowledged from Sidney Sussex College Cambridge, the European Research Council, the Royal Society, JPB Foundation, the Rainwater Foundation, the NIH, and the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre which supports the Cambridge Brain Bank.
Reference:
Georg Meisl et al. 鈥.鈥 Science Advances (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abh1448
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