The Citizen (Gauteng)

Solution to age-old issue?

STUDY: MESSENGER HORMONE APPEARS TO INCREASE COGNITIVE DECLINE

- Tokyo

Research is still in its early stages, and there are several unanswered questions.

Our study suggests that it may not be a static or permanent condition, but rather that it can be reversed.

The march of time can be unkind to the human body but new research hints at a cause – and possible solution – for some of the ailments and decline that often come with age.

Scientists have long known that cognitive decline as we get older and specific age-related diseases including Alzheimer’s are linked to inflammati­on, but they are still uncovering precisely why and how this is the case.

Research published in the journal Nature pinpoints the role of a messenger hormone found in much higher levels in older people and mice than their younger counterpar­ts.

When the hormone was blocked in older mice, they were able to perform as well as more youthful rodents in tests of their memory and navigation.

The researcher­s found that higher levels of the hormone affected the metabolism of immune cells called macrophage­s, prompting them to store energy rather than consume it.

That effectivel­y starved the cells, sending them into a damaging inflammato­ry hyperdrive associated with age-related cognitive decline and several agerelated diseases.

The hormone, prostaglan­din E2 (PGE2), “is a major regulator of all types of inflammati­on, both good and bad, and its effect depends on the receptor that is activated,” said the study’s senior author, Katrin Andreasson.

“In this study, we identified the EP2 receptor as the receptor that leads to energy depletion and maladaptiv­e inflammati­on,” added Andreasson, a professor of neurology at Stanford University.

Having isolated the role played by PGE2, Andreasson and her team then set out to see if there was a way to counteract its negative effects.

They administer­ed to mice two experiment­al compounds that can block the EP2 receptor and found it reversed the metabolic problems seen in older macrophage­s – restoring their more youthful behaviour and preventing destructiv­e inflammato­ry activity.

They found similar effects in mice that were geneticall­y modified with deletions of the EP2 receptor.

Older mice that received the compounds or had the receptor deleted from their genes performed as well as young mice when tested for navigation and spatial memory, both of which deteriorat­e with ageing and diseases like Alzheimer’s.

“Our study suggests that the developmen­t of maladaptiv­e inflammati­on and cognitive decline in ageing may not be a static or permanent condition, but rather that it can be reversed,” the study says.

Andreasson said the findings, while still preliminar­y, could have implicatio­ns for a broad range of conditions.

“This would apply to most age-associated inflammato­ry diseases,” including Alzheimer’s, atheroscle­rosis and arthritis, she said, adding she was “very excited” about possible applicatio­ns.

But the research is still in its early stages and there are several unanswered questions. It is not yet clear how much PGE2 is too much and how it accumulate­s over a lifetime. –

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