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Researchers discover how mutations in
Presenilin Gene cause Early-Onset
Alzheimer’s Disease
Newswise, June 2010 — Researchers have
discovered how mutations in the presenilin 1
gene cause early-onset Alzheimer’s disease
(AD). The finding, reported online in the
journal Cell, opens the door to developing novel
treatments for this form of the mind-robbing
disease and for the more common, late-onset
form that develops later in life and affects
millions of people worldwide.
The presenilin gene is most commonly associated with the
early-onset familial form of Alzheimer’s,
which runs in families and can strike people
in their 30s. The gene was discovered 15
years ago, but until now no one understood
how mutations in the gene caused the
disease.
The researchers led by Ralph Nixon , MD, PhD, professor in
the Departments of Psychiatry and Cell
Biology at NYU Langone Medical Center and
director of the Center for Dementia Research
at the Nathan S. Kline Institute for
Psychiatric Research, discovered that the
presenilin 1 gene performs a crucial
biological function that enables cells to
digest unwanted proteins and is essential
for brain cell survival.
The mutations, they report, disrupt this cellular
protein-recycling process, killing nerve
cells.
“In mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease and
in skin cell of patients with Alzheimer’s
disease caused by presenilin mutations, we
observed that the ability to break down and
reuse normal proteins and to remove
potentially toxic damaged proteins and
organelles is severely impaired,” says Dr.
Nixon who is also director of the Center of
Excellence on Brain Aging and the
Silberstein Alzheimer’s Institute at NYU
Langone Medical Center.
The impairment can kill nerve cells, and the loss of
neurons does not appear to be dependent on
amyloid beta, the plaque-forming protein
found in the brains of patients.
“Most of the drug development for Alzheimer’s has been
focused on removing amyloid from the brain,”
says Dr. Nixon.
“Our findings strongly suggest that there are alternative
pathways that can be targeted as well. For
example, therapies could be aimed at
repairing the cellular mechanism that
eliminates toxic proteins before they damage
the brain.”
Preliminary observations from ongoing studies at the Nathan
Kline Institute, says Dr. Nixon, indicate
that similar disruptions of the cellular
protein-recycling process occur in neurons
affected by late-onset Alzheimer’s,
suggesting that factors other than mutations
in the presenilin gene can also impair this
process.
More than 160 rare mutations in the presenilin 1 gene and
two others have been found to cause
early-onset familial Alzheimer’s disease.
Only a few genes associated with late-onset form of
Alzheimer’s, the most common form of senile
dementia, have been identified so far.
“Presently, no effective treatment exists to
either slow or prevent the progression of
Alzheimer’s disease,” says Dr. Nixon. “There
is urgent need to see Alzheimer’s disease as
multi-factorial and to approach the
treatment from that perspective.”
Funding for this research was provided by the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) and the
Alzheimer’s Association. The study was done
in collaboration with NYU Langone’s
Silberstein Alzheimer’s Institute and the
Center for Dementia Research at the Nathan
S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
(NY); The Marion Bessin Liver Research
Center at Albert Einstein College of
Medicine (NY); Osaka University Graduate
School of Medicine (Japan); University of
Alberta, Edmonton (Canada); and the
University of Chicago (Illinois).
Co-authors include Ju-Hyun Lee, Haung Yu, Asok Kumar,
Sooyeon Lee, Panaiyur S. Mohan, Corrinne M.
Peterhoff and Devin M. Wolfe of NYU Langone
Medical Center. Dr. Yu is presently at the
Taub Institute, Columbia University.
About NYU Langone Medical Center:
NYU Langone Medical Center is one of the
nation's premier centers of excellence in
healthcare, biomedical research, and medical
education. For over 168 years, NYU
physicians and researchers have made
countless contributions to the practice and
science of health care. Today the Medical
Center consists of NYU School of Medicine,
including the Smilow Research Center, the
Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine,
and the Sackler Institute of Graduate
Biomedical Sciences; and the NYU Hospitals
Center, including Tisch Hospital, a 705-bed
acute-care general hospital, Rusk Institute
of Rehabilitation Medicine, the first and
largest facility of its kind, and NYU
Hospital for Joint Diseases, a leader in
musculoskeletal care, a Clinical Cancer
Center and numerous ambulatory sites.
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