Posted on 04/04/2011 11:56:33 AM PDT by decimon
'Cold sores' connected to cognitive decline
ALBUQUERQUE, NM Laboratories at the University of New Mexico (UNM), Brown University, and House Ear Institute (HEI) have developed a new technique to observe herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) infections growing inside cells. HSV1, the cause of the common cold sore, persists in a latent form inside nerve cells. Re-activation and growth of HSV1 infections contribute to cognitive decline associated with Alzheimer's disease. Details are published in the March 31 issue of PLoS ONE magazine from the Public Library of Science.
"Herpes infects mucous membranes, such as the lip or eye, and generates viral particles," submits study Principal Investigator Elaine Bearer, M.D., Ph.D., Harvey Family Professor and Vice Chair for Research, Department of Pathology, UNM School of Medicine. "These viral particles burst out of the cells of the mucous membrane and enter sensory nerve cells where they travel inside the nerve toward the brain. We now can see this cellular transportation system and watch how the newly formed virus engages cellular APP on its journey out of the cell."
Tagging herpes virus inside cells with green fluorescent protein, scientists used live confocal imaging to watch HSV1 particles emerge from infected cells. Newly produced viral particles exit the cell nucleus and then bud into cellular membranes containing amyloid precursor protein (APP). Electron microscopy at HEI detailed the ultrastructural relationship between HSV1 particles and APP.
This dance between viral particles and cellular APP results in changes in cellular architecture and the distribution of APP, the major component of senile plaques found in the brains of Alzheimer's disease patients. Results from this study indicate that most intracellular HSV1 particles undergo frequent, dynamic interplay with APP, which facilitates viral transport while interfering with normal APP transport and distribution. This dynamic interaction reveals a mechanism by which HSV1 infection leads to Alzheimer's disease.
In developed countries such as the U.S., approximately 20 percent of children are infected with HSV1 prior to the age of five. By the second and third decades of life, as much as 60 percent of the population is infected, and late-in-life infection rate reaches 85 percent.
Symptoms of primary HSV1 infection include painful blisters of the mouth, lips or eyes. After infection, HSV1 persists in nerve cells by becoming latent. Upon re-awakening, new viral particles are made in the neuron and then travel back out its pathways to re-infect the mucous membrane. Many infected people experience sporadic episodes of viral outbreaks as the well-known recurrent cold sore.
"Clinicians have seen a link between HSV1 infection and Alzheimer's disease in patients, so we wanted to investigate what might be going on in the body that would account for this," adds Dr. Shi-Bin Cheng, post-doctoral associate, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Alpert Medical School, Brown University. "What we were able to see in the lab strongly suggests a causal link between HSV1 and Alzheimer's Disease."
"It's no longer a matter of determining whether HSV1 is involved in cognitive decline, but rather how significant this involvement is," Bearer asserts. "We'll need to investigate anti-viral drugs used for acute herpes treatment to determine their ability to slow or prevent cognitive decline."
Researchers recommend people treat a cold sore as quickly as possible to minimize the amount of time the virus is actively traveling through a person's nervous system. The faster a cold sore is treated, the faster the HSV1 returns to a dormant stage.
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Additional Authors include: Paulette Ferland, senior research assistant, UNM; Paul Webster, House Ear Institute, Los Angeles, CA; participation of Kathleen Kilpatrck, UNM; and many undergraduate students at Brown who contributed to this project are acknowledged.
Ping
Oh swell. Looks like we’re (almost) all DOOOOOOOOMED!
This is bad news for a lot of people.
I’m one of those 40 year old virgins, that you hear about, but question their existence.
I’ll save you all.
I started getting cold sores when I was a child. I presume I got it from my parents.
About 80 percent of American adults have oral herpes (cold sores).
http://www.globalherbalsupplies.com/herpes/stats.html
Looks like those of us who have had chicken pox are in trouble ;-)
My Father lived to be almost 90... his Father lived to be 92... both suffered cold sores... one smoked himself to death (and was an MD) and my Dad... an Engineer... died of kidney disease. No signs of Alzheimers in my family anywhere.
LLS
And those who haven't should they get it as adults. You just can't win.
20 years ago, aluminum was tagged as the culprit. I wounder what the cause will be 20 years from now when I’m getting to be that age?
I haven’t looked it up but I think HSV1 is the oral type of herpes, and isn’t associated with chicken pox. Chicken pox is Herpes Zoster, and can cause Shingles in someone who’s had chicken pox.
“I don’t want to see him suffer that way.”
So sorry to hear about your grandparents but Alzheimer’s is the only disease where the patient does not suffer but those around them are often terribly affected.
On the other hand, my dad has never had a cold sore, but has Alzheimer’s.
Sorry to hear about your dad.
I think you can carry the virus without ever displaying symptoms.
Herpes Simplex Virus Dances with Amyloid Precursor Protein while Exiting the Cell
What's the treatment? Acyclovir at $5 a pop?
How does one treat a cold sore? I get them and nothing seems to help.
I don't know.
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