Science News

The Naked Scientists: Science Radio & Science Podcasts

Science News RSS Feed

Window into the Alzheimer's Brain

Scientists have developed a way to watch the pathological process that leads to Alzheimer's Disease as it occurs in the brain.

MRI showing an Alzheimers affected brainHarvard researcher Bradley Hyman and his colleagues used a new imaging technique, called multiphoton microscopy, to peer into the brains of experimental mice that had been genetically pre-programmed to develop the rodent-equivalent of the disease.

This new approach meant that the team could look different distances into the same brain regions of single animals over a number of weeks to look out for the appearence of any abnormalities.  Over the course of the study the researchers painstakingly matched up the locations of individual cells and blood vessels in each of the animals' brains as they looked for the development of amyloid plaques, the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's Disease.

These plaques are caused by a build up of a protein called beta-amyloid, which is naturally produced in the brain but is normally broken down and removed.  Why it accumulates, how quickly and how this affects the brain surrounding tissue was not known, but scientists had concluded that the process probably occurs slowly, as evidenced by the pace of progression of the condition in humans.

But the new study has changed all that, because the researchers were surprised to see the plaques forming and evolving very rapidly.  Amyloid deposits could appear in less that 24 hours in a brain region previously free from lesions.  Interestingly, once the plaques reached full size they stopped growing possibly because other brain cells, called microglia, began to cluster around them.  After this adjacent nerve cells began to show structural abnormalities, answering another existing question which was "which came first the abnormal nerve cells or the amyloid plaques?"

Although it's early days the new technique should provide researchers with a powerful new tool with which to probe the development of a disease which will inevitably affect one person in five in the developed world.

10th Feb 2008


Share this News Story
Digg Thisfacebookdel.icio.usNetscapeRedditFarkStumbleuponNewsvineYahoo! My WebFurlMagnoliaSquidoo


Naked Scientists Science Radio Show HomeNaked Scientists Science Radio Show Home Who are The Naked ScientistsWho are The Naked Scientists Information about Naked ScientistsInformation about Naked Scientists
Naked Scientists PodcastNaked Scientists Podcast Ask the Naked Scientists PodcastAsk the Naked Scientists Podcast Question of the Week PodcastQuestion of the Week Podcast
Naked Science ArticlesNaked Science Articles Experiments to do at HomeExperiments to do at Home Science Discussion ForumScience Discussion Forum
Science News StoriesScience News Stories Answers to Science QuestionsAnswers to Science Questions Interviews with Famous ScientistsInterviews with Famous Scientists

Click here for the Naked Scientists PODCAST

The contents of this site are © The Naked Scientists® 2000-2008. The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks.