Increasingly, evidence supports the idea that the immune system, which
protects our bodies from foreign invaders, plays a part in Alzheimer's
disease. But the exact role of immunity in the disease is still a
mystery.
A new Duke University study in mice suggests that in Alzheimer's disease, certain immune cells
that normally protect the brain begin to abnormally consume an
important nutrient: arginine. Blocking this process with a
small-molecule drug prevented the characteristic brain plaques and
memory loss in a mouse model of the disease.
Published April 15 in the Journal of Neuroscience, the new
research not only points to a new potential cause of Alzheimer's but
also may eventually lead to a new treatment strategy.
"If indeed arginine consumption is so important to the disease
process, maybe we could block it and reverse the disease," said senior
author Carol Colton, professor of neurology at the Duke University
School of Medicine, and a member of the Duke Institute for Brain
Sciences.
The brains of people with Alzheimer's disease show two
hallmarks—'plaques' and 'tangles'—that researchers have puzzled over for
some time. Plaques are the build up of sticky proteins called beta
amyloid, and tangles are twisted strands of a protein called tau.
In the study, the scientists used a type of mouse, called CVN-AD,
that they had created several years ago by swapping out a handful of
important genes to make the animal's immune system more similar to a
human's.
Compared with other mice used in Alzheimer's research, the CVN-AD
mouse has it all: plaques and tangles, behavior changes, and neuron
loss.
In addition, the gradual onset of these symptoms in the CVN-AD mouse
gave researchers a chance to study its brain over time and to focus on
how the disease begins, said the study's first author Matthew Kan, an
MD/PhD student in Colton's lab.
Looking for immune abnormalities throughout the lifespan of the mice,
the group found that most immune system components stayed the same in
number, but a type of brain-resident immune cells called microglia that
are known first responders to infection begin to divide and change early
in the disease.
The microglia express a molecule, CD11c, on their surface. Isolating
these cells and analyzing their patterns of gene activity, the
scientists found heightened expression of genes associated with
suppression of the immune system. They also found dampened expression of
genes that work to ramp up the immune system.
"It's surprising, because [suppression of the immune system is] not
what the field has been thinking is happening in AD," Kan said. Instead,
scientists have previously assumed that the brain releases molecules
involved in ramping up the immune system, that supposedly damage the brain.
The group did find CD11c microglia and arginase, an enzyme that
breaks down arginine, are highly expressed in regions of the brain
involved in memory, in the same regions where neurons had died.
Blocking arginase using the small drug difluoromethylornithine (DFMO)
before the start of symptoms in the mice, the scientists saw fewer
CD11c microglia and plaques develop in their brains. These mice
performed better on memory tests.
"All of this suggests to us that if you can block this local process
of amino acid deprivation, then you can protect—the mouse, at least—from
Alzheimer's disease," Kan said.
DFMO is being investigated in human clinical trials to treat some
types of cancer, but it hasn't been tested as a potential therapy for
Alzheimer's. In the new study, Colton's group administered it before the
onset of symptoms; now they are investigating whether DFMO can treat
features of Alzheimer's after they appear.
Does the study suggest that people should eat more arginine or take
dietary supplements? The answer is 'no,' Colton said, partly because a
dense mesh of cells and blood vessels called the blood-brain barrier
determines how much arginine will enter the brain. Eating more arginine
may not help more get into the sites of the brain
that need it. Besides, if the scientists' theory is correct, then the
enzyme arginase, unless it's blocked, would still break down the
arginine.
"We see this study opening the doors to thinking about Alzheimer's in
a completely different way, to break the stalemate of ideas in AD,"
Colton said. "The field has been driven by amyloid for the past 15, 20
years and we have to look at other things because we still do not
understand the mechanism of disease or how to develop effective
therapeutics."
SOURCE:
Medicalxpress and Provided by
Duke University



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