Wales On Sunday

Brain disease toxins boost

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RAMPING up the brain’s garbage disposal system could open up a completely new way of treating Alzheimer’s and other neurodegen­erative diseases, scientists believe.

Tests on the brains of dead Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s patients flagged up an abnormalit­y that interferes with autophagy, the natural clearing out and recycling of unwanted toxic proteins.

An experiment­al molecule was able to undo this defect in mice modelling both diseases, allowing their nerve cells to rid themselves of the toxins.

Scientists hope the early research could lead to new drug treatments that prevent brain damage from harmful accumulati­ng “rubbish”.

The approach involves switching off certain receptor cell proteins that prevent autophagy when they become too active.

Lead scientist Dr Charbel Moussa, from Georgetown University Medical Centre in the US, said: “Activation of these cell receptors appears to prevent brain cells from cleaning out the trash – the toxic build-up of proteins ... common in neurodegen­erative diseases.”

Two of the toxic proteins allowed to pile up when the disposal system stops working are beta-amyloid and tau, both closely linked to Alzheimer’s.

It is the first time scientists have been able to demonstrat­e that “discoidin domain receptors” (DDRs) play a role in Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and possibly other neurodegen­erative diseases. They have already been implicated in the progressio­n of cancer.

In their experiment­s scientists suppressed the receptors with a low dose of their molecule. Targeting the receptors both allowed toxic proteins to be cleared from the brain, and provided protection against inflammati­on.

“This led to cognitive improvemen­t in our animal models,” said Dr Moussa at the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Internatio­nal Conference.

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