1. scienceislove:

neurolove:

Infection Defense May Spur Alzheimer’s
The new hypothesis got its start late one Friday evening in the summer of 2007 in a laboratory at Harvard Medical School. The lead researcher, Rudolph E. Tanzi, a neurology professor who is also director of the genetics and aging unit at Massachusetts General Hospital, said he had been looking at a list of genes that seemed to be associated with Alzheimer’s disease. 
To his surprise, many looked just like genes associated with the so-called innate immune system, a set of proteins the body uses to fight infections. The system is particularly important in the brain, because antibodies cannot get through the blood-brain barrier, the membrane that protects the brain. When the brain is infected, it relies on the innate immune system to protect it. 
For more information about amyloid beta and Alzheimer’s, go to my post here.  If this is true (that amyloid beta is a defense mechanism and not part of the problem), it would really change the way we study and try to treat Alzheimer’s.  There was a “vaccine” against amyloid beta plaques that would have been the vaccine against Alzheimer’s, but in clinical trials, it did not significantly help those that received it in the early stages as far as cognitive decline or time to death went.  If these researchers are right about their new theory, that could help explain why.


<3 My project is modelling ß-sheets, which self assemble into amyloids. I just need to er, stop being ill and get on with it.

    scienceislove:

    neurolove:

    Infection Defense May Spur Alzheimer’s

    The new hypothesis got its start late one Friday evening in the summer of 2007 in a laboratory at Harvard Medical School. The lead researcher, Rudolph E. Tanzi, a neurology professor who is also director of the genetics and aging unit at Massachusetts General Hospital, said he had been looking at a list of genes that seemed to be associated with Alzheimer’s disease.

    To his surprise, many looked just like genes associated with the so-called innate immune system, a set of proteins the body uses to fight infections. The system is particularly important in the brain, because antibodies cannot get through the blood-brain barrier, the membrane that protects the brain. When the brain is infected, it relies on the innate immune system to protect it.

    For more information about amyloid beta and Alzheimer’s, go to my post here.  If this is true (that amyloid beta is a defense mechanism and not part of the problem), it would really change the way we study and try to treat Alzheimer’s.  There was a “vaccine” against amyloid beta plaques that would have been the vaccine against Alzheimer’s, but in clinical trials, it did not significantly help those that received it in the early stages as far as cognitive decline or time to death went.  If these researchers are right about their new theory, that could help explain why.

    <3 My project is modelling ß-sheets, which self assemble into amyloids. I just need to er, stop being ill and get on with it.

     

    tags:  science  project  cool 

    Comments

I spend a large proportion of my online time trying to find cool, pretty or interesting stuff. This is where some of it ends up.
Ask Me Stuff
Stuff I've liked
About Leymoo

Silly
Science
Productivity and Geekery
Food and Cooking
Pretty Stuff
Gaming
Opinions
Other interesting pieces

powered by:
tumblr

theme by:
parker quinn