UCLA discovery sheds light on why Alzheimer's meds rarely help


Zhefeng Guo, Ph.D.

UCLA RESEARCH ALERT

FINDINGS:
The nonprofit Alzheimer's Association projects that the number of people living with Alzheimer's disease will soar from 5 million to 13.8 million by 2050 unless scientists develop new ways to stop the disease. Current medications do not treat Alzheimer's or stop it from progressing; they only temporarily lessen symptoms, such as memory loss and confusion.

Current Alzheimer's drugs aim to reduce the amyloid plaques — sticky deposits that build up in the brain — that are a visual trademark of the disease. These plaques are made of long fibers of a protein called amyloid beta, or Aβ. Recent studies, however, suggest that the real culprit behind Alzheimer's may be small Aβ clumps called oligomers that appear in the brain years before plaques develop.

FINDINGS:
In unraveling oligomers' molecular structure, UCLA scientists discovered that Aβ has a vastly different organization in oligomers than in amyloid plaques. Their finding could shed light on why Alzheimer's drugs designed to seek out amyloid plaques have no effect on oligomers.

IMPACT:
The UCLA study suggests that recent experimental Alzheimer's drugs failed in clinical trials because they zero in on plaques and do not work on oligomers. Future studies on oligomers will help speed the development of new drugs specifically aiming at Aβ oligomers, the researchers say.

Molecular structures of Aβ oligomers
and Aβ fibers

AUTHORS:
Zhefeng Guo, an assistant professor of neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and a member of UCLA's Brain Research Institute and Molecular Biology Institute, is available for interviews.

JOURNAL:
The study was published as the "paper of the week" in the June 28 issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of Biological Chemistry.

GRAPHICS:
Images of Aβ oligomers and Aβ fibers are available upon request.

FUNDING:
The research was supported by the Alzheimer's Association and the American Health Assistance Foundation.

Media Contact:
Elaine Schmidt
(310) 794-2272
[email protected]

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Elaine Schmidt
(310) 794-2272
[email protected]
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