UK Health Radio – Medical News
Update on the Hour
The BBC have run a very interesting report that
neurodegenerative diseases have been halted by harnessing the regenerative
power of hibernation, scientists say.
Bears,
hedgehogs and mice destroy brain connections as they enter hibernation, and
repair them as they wake up.
A UK
team have discovered "cold-shock chemicals" that trigger the process.
They used these to prevent brain cells dying in animals, and say that restoring
lost memories may eventually be possible.
Experts
have described the findings as "promising" and "exciting".
In the early stages of Alzheimer's, and other neurodegenerative disorders,
synapses are lost. This inevitably progresses to whole brain cells dying.
But
during hibernation, 20-30% of the connections in the brain - synapses - are
culled as the body preserves precious resources over winter. And remarkably
those connections are reformed in the spring, with no loss of memory.
In
experiments, non-hibernating mice with Alzheimer's disease and prion disease
were cooled so their body temperature dropped from 37C to 16-18C.
Young
diseased mice lost synapses during the chill and regained them as they warmed
up.
Old
mice also lost brain connections, but were unable to re-establish them.
The study,
that was published in the Journal Nature, found levels of a
"cold-shock" chemical called RBM3 soared when young mice were
chilled, but this was not the case in
old mice.
It
suggested RBM3 was key to the formation of new connections. In a further set of
tests, the team showed the brain cell deaths from prion disease and Alzheimer's
could be prevented by artificially boosting RBM3 levels.
Prof
Giovanna Mallucci, from the MRC Toxicology Unit in Leicester, told the BBC News
website: "This gives us a target to develop a drug in the same way
paracetamol is used for a fever rather than a cold bath. Memories can be
restored during hibernation as only the receiving end of the synapse shuts
down.”
It
is still only an interesting concept, but has attracted some praise.
Dr
Doug Brown, the director of research and development at the Alzheimer's Society
said: "We know that cooling body temperate can protect the brain from some
forms of damage and it's interesting to see this protective mechanism now also
being studied in neurodegenerative disease. While we don't think body cooling
is a feasible treatment for long-term, progressive conditions like Alzheimer's
disease, this research opens up the possibility of finding drugs that can have
the same effect. We are very much looking forward to seeing this research taken
forward to the next stage."
Dr
Eric Karran, the director of research at Alzheimer's Research UK, said the
study was "promising" and "highlights a natural process nerve
cells use to protect themselves". He
added "a future treatment able to bolster nerve cells against damage could
have wide-reaching benefits".
Amanda
Thomas
UK
Health Radio – Medical News Update on the Hour
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