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New Study Offers Hope For New Class Of Drugs For Alzheimer's

by VR Sreeraman on Oct 19 2010 5:22 PM

A new Penn study has discovered and tested in an animal model of Alzheimer's disease a class of drug that is able to enter the brain.

 New Study Offers Hope For New Class Of Drugs For Alzheimer`s
A new Penn study has discovered and tested in an animal model of Alzheimer's disease a class of drug that is able to enter the brain, where it stabilizes degenerating neurons and improves memory and learning.In the normal brain, the protein tau plays an important role in stabilizing structures called microtubules in nerve cells, which serve as tracks upon which cellular material is transported.
In Alzheimer's disease and related disorders, tau becomes insoluble and forms clumps in the brain. One consequence of these aggregates is a depletion of normal tau, resulting in destabilization of the microtubule tracks that are critical for proper nerve-cell function.

Senior authors Virginia M.-Y. Lee, director of the Center for Neurodegenerative Disease Research (CNDR), and John Trojanowski, director of the Institute on Aging and CNDR co-director, introduced the concept of using microtubule-stabilizing drugs over 15 years ago to counteract tangles of tau and compensate for the loss of normal tau function.

Kurt Brunden, director of Drug Discovery at CNDR and Bin Zhang, senior research investigator, are the first authors on this study from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicineand the School of Arts and Sciences.

In 2005, the CNDR researchers showed that the anti-cancer drug paclitaxel could improve spinal cord nerve function in mice with tau tangles in their brains, after the drug was absorbed at nerve termini in muscle.

"However, paclitaxel and related drugs do not cross the blood-brain barrier," notes Brunden. "So we surveyed a number of additional microtubule-stabilizing agents and discovered that the epothilone class, and in particular epothilone D, readily entered and persisted in the brain."

"The positive effect of epothilone D on the function of axons and on cognition, without the onset of side-effects offers hope that this class of microtubule-stabilizing drugs could progress to testing in Alzheimer patients in the near future," said Lee.

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"There are very few tau-focused drugs in clinical trials now for Alzheimer's disease. While we and others have urged that pharmaceutical companies should not put all of their eggs in one drug basket to ensure the highest likelihood of finding disease-modifying therapies for Alzheimer's, we hope this successful mouse study of a tau drug will encourage more pharmaceutical companies to pursue programs on tau-focused drug discovery," said Trojanowski.

The study has been published this week in the Journal of Neuroscienc.

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Source-ANI


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