Daily Trust Sunday

One type of brain cell may invite Alzheimer’s

- Source:sciencedai­ly.com

Better tactics for detecting, preventing and treating Alzheimer’s disease depend on a clearer understand­ing of cellular-level changes in the minds of patients, and a new study has uncovered novel details about the vulnerabil­ity of one type of brain cell.

Researcher­s found that excitatory neurons -- those that are more likely to trigger an action (as opposed to inhibitory neurons, which are less likely to prompt neural activity) -- are more vulnerable to accumulati­ons of abnormal tau protein, which is increasing­ly being implicated in Alzheimer’s disease.

The study also uncovered some possible genetic explanatio­ns for the vulnerabil­ity of those cells, work that has the potential to one day lead to targeted treatment. The study, co-led by Hongjun “Harry” Fu of The Ohio State University, appears today (Dec. 17, 2018) in the journal Nature Neuroscien­ce. Fu, who recently came to Ohio State from Columbia University, co-led the research with Karen Duff of Columbia and Michele Vendruscol­o of the University of Cambridge.

Much of the research on Alzheimer’s disease in the past focused on the buildup of amyloid beta proteins in the brain. But work by Fu and his collaborat­ors is focused on another protein linked to the disease, called tau.

Tau plays an important role in normal, healthy neurologic­al activity. But when it builds up within neurons early on in the progressio­n of Alzheimer’s disease, it clogs and then kills those cells. Excessive accumulati­on of the abnormal tau protein also has been linked to other neurologic­al diseases, including dementia and traumatic brain injury, said Fu, an assistant professor of neuroscien­ce, who is also a member of the Neurologic­al Institute at Ohio State’s Wexner Medical Center and part of the university’s Chronic Brain Injury program.

The researcher­s studied the brains of patients who had Alzheimer’s disease and also a mouse model and found that the abnormal tau protein accumulate­d predominan­tly in excitatory neurons, rather than inhibitory neurons.

Then, using genetic analysis from the brains of donors who did not have Alzheimer’s disease or other neurologic­al disorders, they found significan­t genetic difference­s between the excitatory neurons and other cells that seemed to explain the excitatory neurons’ susceptibi­lity.

Furthermor­e, the researcher­s confirmed that one of the “master regulator” genes, BAG3, is responsibl­e for the clearance of abnormal tau protein.

“We think there’s a really early, intrinsic difference in the brain cells that are prone to the accumulati­on of tau protein, which may explain why only certain neurons and brain regions are vulnerable to this problem in early Alzheimer’s,” Fu said.

“If we can figure out the molecular determinan­ts underlying vulnerabil­ity to this disease, it will help us better understand the developmen­t of Alzheimer’s disease and potentiall­y could lead to techniques for early detection and targeted treatment.”

Fu said future research will focus on understand­ing how genes interact with each other and contribute to vulnerabil­ity in Alzheimer’s disease and other neurologic­al diseases associated with tau accumulati­on.

“Other brain cells, including microglia, astrocytes and oligodendr­ocytes, have also been found to play important roles in the developmen­t of Alzheimer’s disease. We are very interested to understand how those cells communicat­e with each other and affect the vulnerabil­ity of certain neurons,” Fu said.

“Environmen­tal factors, brain injury, diabetes, sleep deprivatio­n, depression and other outside factors also have been linked to increased vulnerabil­ity to Alzheimer’s. We want to understand how intrinsic difference­s interact with these outside influences.”

 ?? PHOTO: ?? Tangles of tau protein in the brain of a person with Alzheimer’s disease web
PHOTO: Tangles of tau protein in the brain of a person with Alzheimer’s disease web

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