One of the biggest challenges with Alzheimer's disease (AD) is that by the time physicians can detect behavioral changes, the disease has already begun its irreversibly destructive course. Scientists know toxic brain lesions created by amyloid beta and tau proteins are involved. Yet, emerging therapies targeting these lesions have failed in recent clinical trials. These findings suggest that successful treatments will require diagnosis of disease at its earliest stages.


Now, by using computer-aided drug discovery, an Ohio State University molecular biochemist and molecular imaging chemist are collaborating to create an imaging chemical that attaches predominantly to tau-bearing lesions in living brain. Their hope is that the "designer" tracer will open the door for earlier diagnosis - and better treatments for Alzheimer's, frontal temporal dementia and traumatic brain injuries like those suffered by professional athletes, all conditions in which tangled tau filaments accumulate in brain tissue.


"We're creating agents that are specifically engineered to bind the surface of aggregated tau proteins so that we can see where and how much tau is collecting in the brain," said Jeff Kuret, professor of molecular and cellular biochemistry at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. "We think the "tau signature" can be used to improve diagnosis and staging of disease."


The study's co-investigator, Michael Tweedle, a professor of radiology at Ohio State's College of Medicine, notes that there may be more advantages to being able to image tau.


"Unlike beta amyloid, tau appears in specific brain regions in Alzheimer's," said Tweedle. "With a better view of how tau is distinct from amyloid, we'll be able to create a much more accurate view of disease staging, and do a much better job getting the right therapeutics into the right populations at the right time."


Tweedle notes that there are no drugs currently available that target tau, but that several are in development. Both investigators emphasized that being able to image tau in a living brain could be critical for identifying individuals that could benefit from tau-tackling drugs as they move into clinical trials.







http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGomp1u64n1dwkyLHBNS6Z_fgDOyQ&url=http://www.news-medical.net/news/20130426/Researchers-create-designer-tracer-for-earlier-diagnosis-and-better-treatments-of-Alzheimers.aspx

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Top