Keyword: amyloid

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  • Green tea chemical combined with another may hold promise for treatment of brain disorders

    12/03/2009 6:40:20 AM PST · by decimon · 7 replies · 432+ views
    Watertown, MA—Scientists at Boston Biomedical Research Institute (BBRI) and the University of Pennsylvania have found that combining two chemicals, one of which is the green tea component EGCG, can prevent and destroy a variety of protein structures known as amyloids. Amyloids are the primary culprits in fatal brain disorders such as Alzheimer's, Huntington's, and Parkinson's diseases. Their study, published in the current issue of Nature Chemical Biology (December 2009), may ultimately contribute to future therapies for these diseases. "These findings are significant because it is the first time a combination of specific chemicals has successfully destroyed diverse forms of amyloids...
  • Tracing amyloid in Alzheimer's

    10/15/2009 12:40:26 AM PDT · by neverdem · 26 replies · 1,023+ views
    Chemistry World ^ | 14 October 2009 | Phil Taylor
    A diagnostic compound that allows researchers to look into the brains of Alzheimer's patients will be used for the first time to gauge the effects of an experimental therapy for the disease. Called florbetaben, the diagnostic could also provide important insights into the role of beta amyloid, a protein that accumulates into plaques in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease and has been shown to be toxic to nerve cells. The compound is an 18F-radiolabelled tracer that binds specifically to deposits of beta amyloid, and can be measured using positron emission tomography (PET), a nuclear imaging technique which produces a three-dimensional image of...
  • Scientists make discovery in Alzheimer's

    08/11/2006 9:51:04 AM PDT · by neverdem · 52 replies · 2,024+ views
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | August 10, 2006 | LAURAN NEERGAARD
    AP MEDICAL WRITER WASHINGTON -- Scientists have discovered molecular janitors that clear away a sticky gunk blamed for Alzheimer's disease - until they get old and quit sweeping up. The finding helps explain why Alzheimer's is a disease of aging. More importantly, it suggests a new weapon: drugs that give nature's cleanup crews a boost. "It's a whole new way of thinking in the Alzheimer's field," said Dr. Andrew Dillin, a biologist at California's Salk Institute for Biological Studies who led the new research. The discovery, published Thursday by the journal Science, was made in a tiny roundworm called C....
  • Studies Link Diabetes to Risk of Alzheimer’s

    07/16/2006 7:03:22 PM PDT · by neverdem · 52 replies · 1,015+ views
    NY Terrorist Tip Sheet ^ | July 16, 2006 | DENISE GRADY
    Several new studies suggest that diabetes increases the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, adding to a store of evidence that links the disorders. The studies involve only Type 2 diabetes, the most common type, which is usually related to obesity. The connection raises an ominous prospect: that increases in diabetes, a major concern in the United States and worldwide, may worsen the rising toll from Alzheimer’s. The findings also add dementia to the cloud of threats that already hang over people with diabetes, including heart disease, strokes, kidney failure, blindness and amputations. But some of the studies also hint that measures...
  • Researchers Create an Artificial Prion (Mad Cow, deer and elk Chronic Wasting Disease, ALERT)

    07/29/2004 6:07:07 PM PDT · by neverdem · 11 replies · 816+ views
    NY Times ^ | July 29, 2004 | SANDRA BLAKESLEE
    Scientists are reporting that, for the first time, they have made an artificial prion, or misfolded protein, that can, by itself, produce a deadly infectious disease in mice and may help explain the roots of mad cow disease. The findings, being reported on Friday in the journal Science, are strong evidence for the so-called "protein only hypothesis," the controversial idea that a protein, acting alone without the help of DNA or RNA, can cause certain kinds of infectious diseases. The concept was introduced in 1982 by Dr. Stanley Prusiner, a neurology professor at the University of California in San Francisco,...
  • New drug may lead to alzheimers cure.

    05/17/2002 3:52:39 PM PDT · by scouse · 5 replies · 516+ views
    NATURE Online ^ | 5/17/02 | Helen Pearson
    Drug saps Alzheimer's Optimism for chemical that destabilizes harmful protein build-ups. HELEN PEARSON Clinical studies will start within weeks on a new drug that may erode the protein clumps behind Alzheimer's disease and type II diabetes. In these diseases, proteins that are usually soluble fold abnormally into tightly packed deposits called amyloid that wreck internal organs. In mice, the prototype drug shrank these protein accretions within weeks, scientists have revealed. Preliminary tests on patients look promising. "I can't describe how excited I was," says Mark Pepys of University College Medical School in London, who has been working on the...