0

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Disease Center
Mitochondrial Research Affinity Collaboration-Laboratories & Engineering

Home > 0

How brain cells die in patients with Alzheimer's Disease

  • 작성자한진
  • 작성일2006-03-19 19:40:48
  • 조회수1913
  • 첨부파일첨부파일
Researchers at Children's Hospital & Research Center at Oakland (CHRCO) have published a new study that is the first to explain how brain cells die in patients with Alzheimer's Disease. This discovery is an important first step to helping researchers devise ways to slow, prevent and eventually cure a disease that affects an estimated 4.5 million Americans. In a study published in the February 28th issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, lead scientist Hani Atamna, Ph.D., found that alterations in the production of heme (a molecule that contains iron) may be the key to understanding why excessive amyloid-beta is toxic to brain cells. Dr. Atamna had previously discovered that Alzheimer's patients have abnormal amounts of heme in their brains. In new research results, Atamna's team showed that amyloid-beta readily binds with heme to form a compound that can be flushed from cells. When there is insufficient heme or too much amyloid-beta, however, the amyloid-beta forms large toxic "clumps" that the cell cannot dissolve and eliminate. Though heme binding with amyloid-beta can be beneficial, if too much heme is bound up with amyloid-beta, there may be insufficient heme available for the cell to properly function. When this happens, the cell's mitochondria, which are the tiny structures inside brain cells that produce the energy the cells need to function, begin to decay. Dr. Atamna refers to this phenomenon as a "functional heme deficiency" because the cells are still forming heme, but it is trapped within an amyloid-beta/heme compound. When they examined the heme/ amyloid-beta compound researchers in the Atamna laboratory were surprised to discover it was a peroxidase--a type of enzyme that reacts harmfully with biological materials essential for proper brain function such as serotonin and L-DOPA. Dr. Atamna believes that the combination of functional heme deficiency, which harms mitochondria needed to produce energy, together with the increase in oxidative damage caused by the peroxidase, is what eventually kills the cell. "Until now, we didn't understand all the factors that trigger Alzheimer's disease. The discovery of the formation of amyloid-beta peroxidase provides a clear picture of why cells die in the brain of Alzheimer's patients. Our next challenge is to develop drugs that directly and selectively target the excessive peroxidase of amyloid-beta, which could lead to the first significant therapy for Alzheimer's disease." http://www.childrenshospitaloakland.org
Total406 [ page4/28 ]
No. 제목 작성자 작성일 조회수
361 제 6회 논문연구계획서 발표대회: 최성우 학생 우수상 수상 첨부파일 2010.04.28 최성우 2010.04.28 2,859
360 다이어트 운동과 AMPK와의 관계 2010.04.20 고태희 2010.04.20 4,609
359 인슐린 생산 베타세포 재생 가능 2010.04.06 김형규 2010.04.06 3,453
358 축하합니다. 김나리 선생님: 2010 국제협력연구사업 선정 2010.03.05 한진 2010.03.05 3,581
357 동맥경화 촉진 유전자 찾아냈다...이화여대 오구택 교수 2010.02.25 허혜진 2010.02.25 3,293
356 국지적 항산화단백질 조절 메커니즘 규명...국가과학자 이서구 이화여대 교수 2010.02.25 허혜진 2010.02.25 3,295
355 Prog Biophys Mol Biol논문 accept소식 2010.02.20 박원선 2010.02.20 2,662
354 Pflugers Arch논문 accept소식 2010.02.17 박원선 2010.02.17 1,912
353 장미 박사님 질병관리본부 합격 2010.02.16 박원선 2010.02.16 2,976
352 Seaons's Greetings to ALL 첨부파일 2010.01.04 한진 2010.01.04 1,663
351 안준석 제 5회 부산미래과학자상 수상자 선정 첨부파일 2009.12.02 한진 2009.12.02 4,677
350 인슐린 신호전달과 미토콘드리아 기능을 통합시키는 Foxo1 첨부파일 2009.11.24 홍다혜 2009.11.24 5,358
349 심혈관·대사질환 10대 주목 프로젝트 선정 2009.11.16 한진 2009.11.16 2,357
348 JPS논문 accept소식 2009.11.06 박원선 2009.11.06 1,724
347 Bone논문 accept소식 2009.11.05 박원선 2009.11.05 2,369
처음이전 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 다음 마지막