Green Tea and
Red Wine Extracts Interrupt Alzheimer's Disease Pathway in Cells
Feb. 5, 2013 — Natural chemicals
found in green tea and red wine may disrupt a key step of the Alzheimer's
disease pathway, according to new research from the University of Leeds.
In early-stage laboratory experiments, the researchers identified
the process which allows harmful clumps of protein to latch on to brain cells,
causing them to die. They were able to interrupt this pathway using the
purified extracts of EGCG from green tea and resveratrol from red wine.
The findings, published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry,
offer potential new targets for developing drugs to treat Alzheimer's disease,
which affects some 800,000 people in the UK alone, and for which there is
currently no cure.
"This is an important step in increasing our understanding of
the cause and progression of Alzheimer's disease," says lead researcher
Professor Nigel Hooper of the University's Faculty of Biological Sciences.
"It's a misconception that Alzheimer's is a natural part of aging; it's a
disease that we believe can ultimately be cured through finding new
opportunities for drug targets like this."
Alzheimer's disease is characterised by a distinct build-up of
amyloid protein in the brain, which clumps together to form toxic, sticky balls
of varying shapes. These amyloid balls latch on to the surface of nerve cells
in the brain by attaching to proteins on the cell surface called prions,
causing the nerve cells to malfunction and eventually die.
"We wanted to investigate whether the precise shape of the
amyloid balls is essential for them to attach to the prion receptors, like the
way a baseball fits snugly into its glove," says co-author Dr Jo
Rushworth. "And if so, we wanted to see if we could prevent the amyloid
balls binding to prion by altering their shape, as this would stop the cells
from dying."
The team formed amyloid balls in a test tube and added them to
human and animal brain cells. Professor Hooper said: "When we added the
extracts from red wine and green tea, which recent research has shown to
re-shape amyloid proteins, the amyloid balls no longer harmed the nerve cells.
We saw that this was because their shape was distorted, so they could no longer
bind to prion and disrupt cell function.
"We also showed, for the first time, that when amyloid balls
stick to prion, it triggers the production of even more amyloid, in a deadly
vicious cycle," he added.
Professor Hooper says that the team's next steps are to understand
exactly how the amyloid-prion interaction kills off neurons.
"I'm certain that this will increase our understanding of
Alzheimer's disease even further, with the potential to reveal yet more drug
targets," he said.
Dr Simon Ridley, Head of Research at Alzheimer's Research UK, the
UK's leading dementia research charity, which part-funded the study, said:
"Understanding the causes of Alzheimer's is vital if we are
to find a way of stopping the disease in its tracks.
While these early-stage results should not be
a signal for people to stock up on green tea and red wine, they could provide
an important new lead in the search for new and effective treatments. With half
a million people affected by Alzheimer's in the UK, we urgently need treatments
that can halt the disease -- that means it's crucial to invest in research to
take results like these from the lab bench to the clinic."
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