Salk researchers show how two experimental Alzheimer's drugs protect the brains of mice from other aspects of aging.
Investigational drug candidates CMS121 and J147 enhance memory and slow down the degeneration of brain cells in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease, according to the study published in the journal eLife. The compounds can slow aging in healthy older mice, blocking the damage to brain cells that normally occurs during aging and restoring the levels of specific molecules to those seen in younger brains.
‘Two compounds CMS121 and J147 prevent molecular changes associated with aging and preserve the function of energy generating mitochondria in cells.’
Read More..
The research suggests that the drug candidates may be useful for treating a broader array of conditions and points out a new pathway that links normal aging to Alzheimer's disease. Read More..
"This study further validated these two compounds not only as Alzheimer's drug candidates but also as potentially more widely useful for their anti-aging effects," says Pamela Maher, a senior staff scientist at Salk and a co-corresponding author of the new paper.
Old age is the biggest risk factor for Alzheimer's disease--above the age of 65, a person's risk of developing the disease doubles about every five years. However, at a molecular level, scientists aren't sure what occurs in the brain with aging that contributes to Alzheimer's.
"The contribution of old age-associated detrimental processes to the disease has been largely neglected in Alzheimer's disease drug discovery," says Antonio Currais, a Salk staff scientist and first author of the new paper.
Maher and David Schubert, the head of Salk's Cellular Neurobiology Lab, previously developed CMS121 and J147, variants of plant compounds with medicinal properties. Both compounds tested positive for their ability to keep neurons alive when exposed to cellular forms of stress related to aging and Alzheimer's disease.
Advertisement
In the new research, Maher, Currais and their colleagues turned to a strain of mice that ages unusually fast. A subset of these mice was given CMS121 or J147 beginning at nine months old--the equivalent of late middle age in humans. After four months, the team tested the memory and behavior of the animals and analyzed genetic and molecular markers in their brains.
Advertisement
"The bottom line was that these two compounds prevent molecular changes that are associated with aging," says Maher.
More detailed experiments showed that both drugs affected mitochondria by increasing levels of the chemical acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-coA).
In isolated brain cells, when the researchers blocked an enzyme that normally breaks down acetyl-CoA, or when they added extra amounts of an acetyl-coA precursor, they saw the same beneficial effect on mitochondria and energy generation. The brain cells became protected against the normal molecular changes associated with aging.
"There was already some data from human studies that the function of mitochondria is negatively impacted in aging and that it's worse in the context of Alzheimer's," says Maher. "This helps solidify that link."
Maher and Currais are planning future experiments to test the effects of CMS121 and J147 on how other organs age. They also hope to use the new results to inform the development of new Alzheimer's drugs; targeting other molecules in the acetyl-coA pathway may help treat the disease, they hypothesize.
"We are now using a variety of animal models to investigate how this neuroprotective pathway regulates specific molecular aspects of mitochondrial biology, and their effects on aging and Alzheimer's," says Currais.
Source-Eurekalert