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Multimillion-Dollar Grant Examines Ties Between Alzheimer鈥檚 and Down Syndrome

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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快活app researchers hope their work can lead to early detection and treatment

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A multimillion-dollar grant from the National Institutes of Health will allow faculty and staff at the 快活app to study the links between Down syndrome and Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, with hopes of catching the latter in its earliest stages.

Lotta Granholm-Bentley
Lotta Granholm-Bentley

Lotta Granholm-Bentley, executive director of 快活app's Knoebel Institute for听Healthy Aging (KIHA), is teaming with an associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry at the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. Together, they will pool their expertise to take on the sixth-leading cause of death in the United States.

鈥淥nly by engaging several different disciplines can you really come up with big discoveries,鈥 says Granholm-Bentley, whose background is in neuroscience. 鈥淚 came [to 快活app] to do these kind of projects that involve other departments.鈥

The focus of the research revolves around a protein called 鈥渢au.鈥 it helps the trillions of nerve cells in the brain communicate with one another by keeping the pathways between them straight and orderly.

But for the (a figure that is projected to rise to nearly 15 million by the year 2050), things look different. In many cases, the normal function of tau protein collapses, allowing 鈥渢angles鈥 to form in the brain and disintegrating the pathways between nerve cells. How and why that happens is still a mystery.

Brain tangles
This photo shows tau tangles inside the brain's hippocampus. (Photo: Lotta Granholm-Bentley)

Brain tangles are also found in two other medical conditions.听One is听chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a disease that has for its connection to contact sports like football. The other is Down syndrome, which is closely tied to Alzheimer鈥檚: 80%听of those born with an extra 21st chromosome will develop the disease as they age.

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e trying to see with this particular grant is whether people with Down syndrome get a kind of tau tangle that鈥檚 more like CTE or more like Alzheimer鈥檚,鈥 Granholm-Bentley says. 鈥淎nd once we know that, we can design new treatment paradigms that can actually target a particular form of tau and maybe prevent the [Alzheimer鈥檚] from happening.鈥

Martin Margittai
Martin Margittai

Granholm-Bentley and Margittai also want to know how early tangles form in people with Down syndrome with the hope of catching Alzheimer鈥檚 as quickly as possible.

Since Alzheimer鈥檚 tends to choose its targets sporadically and can sometimes take decades to develop, it鈥檚 difficult to detect until it鈥檚 too late. But a person who has Down syndrome is extremely likely to develop Alzheimer鈥檚. So studying them from childhood could mean finding tangles earlier and potentially treating them. Currently, there is no approved treatment, though some medications are being tested on mice. Margittai and Granholm-Bentley think their work could represent a significant stride forward.

鈥淭he [current] drugs that work on mice, [are only tested on] people who are already in the advanced stage of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease,鈥 Margittai says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too late. 鈥 You cannot revitalize them. But if you detect it early, you may be able to intervene earlier and there is more reversibility.鈥

There鈥檚 another aspect of the science too. The 快活app research group has discovered that the brain discards 听what鈥檚 called an 鈥渆xosome,鈥 which Granholm-Bentley describes as a little bubble. Scientists can examine those bubbles through a routine blood test and search for traces of tau, which could warn of dementia in the future.

鈥淚 think this is very high-impact work because it has real-life implications,鈥 Margittai says. 鈥淸Alzheimer鈥檚 is] a major societal problem. ... More and more people will become affected because of the aging population. And it鈥檚 not just affecting the person, but their families as well.鈥 Currently, more than 16 million Americans provide an estimated 18.5 billion hours of care (an estimated cost of $234 billion) for those who suffer from the disease.

The NIH grant funds the next five years of research, allowing 快活app to partner with other institutions across the country and even around the world, in Barcelona and Stockholm. This grant is also a collaborative effort with Dr. Elliott Mufson at the Barrow Neurological Institute in Arizona, and with Dr. Aurelie Ledreux鈥檚 lab at KIHA and several other investigators, both at 快活app and other universities.听On campus, Granholm-Bentley and Margittai agree that collaboration is the key to making meaningful strides. Their work is complementary, they say, fusing molecular and physiological expertise.

鈥淎 strong trend in research now is to form interdisciplinary research teams,鈥 Granholm-Bentley says.听鈥漈his is above and beyond our most important mission.鈥

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