The Palm Beach Post

Study finds new links between viruses and Alzheimer’s disease

- By Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON — Viruses that sneak into the brain just might play a role in Alzheimer’s, scientists reported Thursday in a provocativ­e study that promises to reignite some long-debated theories about what triggers the mind-robbing disease.

The findings don’t prove viruses cause Alzheimer’s, nor do they suggest it’s contagious.

But a team led by researcher­s at New York’s Mount Sinai Health System found that certain viruses — including two extremely common herpes viruses — affect the behavior of genes involved in Alzheimer’s.

The idea that infections earlier in life might somehow set the stage for Alzheimer’s decades later has simmered at the edge of mainstream medicine for years. It’s been overshadow­ed by the prevailing theory that Alzheimer’s stems from sticky plaques that clog the brain.

Thursday’s study has even some specialist­s who never embraced the infection connection saying it’s time for a closer look, especially as attempts to block those so-called beta-amyloid plaques have failed.

“With an illness this terrible, we cannot afford to dismiss all scientific possibilit­ies,” said Dr. John Morris, who directs the Alzheimer’s research center at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. He wasn’t involved in the new research but called it impressive.

The study also fits with mounting evidence that how aggressive­ly the brain’s immune system defends itself against viruses or other germs may be riskier than an actual infection, said Alzheimer’s specialist Dr. Rudolph Tanzi of Massachuse­tts General Hospital. With Harvard colleague Dr. Robert Moir, Tanzi has performed experiment­s showing that sticky beta-amyloid captures invading germs by engulfing them — and that’s why the plaque starts forming in the first place.

The team from Mount Sinai and Arizona State University came up with some viral suspects — by accident. The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, wasn’t hunting viruses but was looking for new drug targets for Alzheimer’s. The researcher­s were using complex genetic data from hundreds of brains at several brain banks to compare difference­s between people who’d died with Alzheimer’s and the cognitivel­y normal.

The first clues that viruses were around “came screaming out at us,” said Mount Sinai geneticist Joel Dudley, a senior author of the research published Thursday in the journal Neuron.

Since 1980, other researcher­s have linked a variety of bacteria and viruses to an increased risk of Alzheimer’s. But it was never clear if germs were bystanders or actively spurring Alzheimer’s.

The new study went farther: Researcher­s used computer models to check how the viral genes interacted with human genes, proteins and amyloid buildup, almost like the viruses’ social media connection­s, Dudley explained.

They found a lot of interactio­ns, suggesting the viruses could even switch on and off Alzheimer’s-related genes. To see if those interactio­ns mattered, the researcher­s bred mice lacking one molecule that herpes seemed to deplete. Sure enough, the animals developed more of those amyloid plaques.

“I look at this paper and it makes me sit up and say, ‘Wow,’” said Alzheimer’s Associatio­n scientific programs director Keith Fargo.

He said the research makes a viral connection much more plausible but cautioned that the study won’t affect how today’s patients are treated.

If the findings pan out, they could change how scientists look for new ways to treat or prevent Alzheimer’s, said Dr. Miroslaw Mackiewicz of NIH’s National Institute on Aging. Already, NIH is funding a firststep study to see if an antiviral drug benefits people who have both mild Alzheimer’s and different herpes viruses.

Just having a herpes virus “does not mean you’re going to get Alzheimer’s,” Mass General’s Tanzi stressed. It may not even have penetrated the brain.

But in another study soon to be published, Tanzi showed biological­ly how both HHV6 and a cold sore-causing herpes virus can trigger or “seed” amyloid plaque formation, supporting the Mount Sinai findings.

Still, he doesn’t think viruses are the only suspects.

“The Mount Sinai paper tells us the viral side of the story. We still have to work out the microbe side of the story,” said Tanzi, who is looking for bacteria and other bugs in what’s called the Brain Microbiome Project. “The brain was always thought to be a sterile place. It’s absolutely not true.”

 ?? CHRIS SWEDA / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Doug Brown (second from right), a resident of Silverado Memory Care near Chicago, plays the guitar during a music therapy program earlier this year for people with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. A new study links viruses to Alzheimer’s.
CHRIS SWEDA / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Doug Brown (second from right), a resident of Silverado Memory Care near Chicago, plays the guitar during a music therapy program earlier this year for people with dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. A new study links viruses to Alzheimer’s.

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