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Posts Tagged ‘Alzheimers Disease’

 

Discovery of Causal gene mutation responsible for two dissimilar neurological diseasesAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)

 

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Expanding the Genetics of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD)

Ground-breaking study, identifying a causal gene mutation for two dissimilar neurological diseases.

 

TALK Date:

Wednesday, August 7

Time:

10:00 am PT / 1:00 pm ET

Speakers:

Bryan Traynor, MD, Ph.D.

Investigator Head, Neuromuscular Diseases Research Unit 

Laboratory of Neurogenetics National Institute of Aging, National Institutes of Health 

Abstract

Dr. Bryan Traynor and his team participated in a ground-breaking international study, identifying a causal gene mutation responsible for two dissimilar neurological diseases, ALS and FTD. As members of a worldwide consortium, his research team used next-generation sequencing to identify a large hexanucleotide repeat that disrupts the C9ORF72 gene located on chromosome 9. The mutation accounts for approximately 40% of all familial cases of ALS and FTD in European and North American populations, and also ~1% of Alzheimer’s disease cases. ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder that leads to rapidly progressive paralysis and respiratory failure. Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is the most common form of dementia in the population under the age of 65. 

This landmark discovery has impacted how these neurological disorders are diagnosed, investigated and perceived. It also provides a distinct therapeutic target for gene therapy efforts aimed at ameliorating these diseases. 

SOURCE

Illumina

illumina@admail.directeffectmedia.com

 

 

 

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

BACE1 Inhibition role played in the underlying Pathology of Alzheimer’s Disease

Merck Presents Findings from Phase 1b Study of Investigational BACE Inhibitor, MK-8931, in Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease

Sunday, July 14, 2013 8:30 am EDT
“Further evaluation of MK-8931 continues in our EPOCH study, a Phase II/III trial in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s.”

Merck, known as MSD outside the United States and Canada, today announced the presentation of results from a Phase Ib study showing a dose-dependent decrease in β amyloid levels in cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) following administration of MK-8931, Merck’s investigational oral β-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme (BACE1 or β secretase) inhibitor, in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In the study, β amyloid levels were analyzed as a measure of BACE activity. The data were presented during an oral session at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference (AAIC) in Boston, July 13-18 (Abstract O1-06-05).

“The amyloid β reduction observed with MK-8931 may offer an opportunity to further understand the role BACE1 inhibition plays in the underlying pathology of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Darryle Schoepp, Ph.D., vice president of Neuroscience Early Development and Discovery Sciences, Merck. “Further evaluation of MK-8931 continues in our EPOCH study, a Phase II/III trial in patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s.”

Results of MK-8931 Phase Ib Study

The randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multiple dose study evaluated the safety and tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic profile of MK-8931 in patients with mild to moderate AD (n=32). Patients were randomized to receive one of three doses (12 mg, 40 mg and 60 mg) orally of MK-8931 or placebo once-daily for seven days. Samples of CSF were collected via a lumbar catheter and analyzed for levels of amyloid β 40 (Aβ40), amyloid β 42 (Ab42) and soluble amyloid precursor protein β (sAPPb) as biomarkers of BACE1 activity.

In this study, administration of MK-8931 at doses of 12, 40 and 60 mg resulted in a dose-dependent and sustained reduction in the levels of Ab40, a measure of BACE1 activity, in CSF from baseline of 57, 79 and 84 percent, respectively. The mean percentage of baseline in biomarkers Aβ40, Aβ42 and sAPPβ for each dose of MK-8931 as measured following a seven day dosing period is shown in the table.

Dose MK-8931

*Ab40

[TWA 0-24hrs (90% CI)]

*Ab42

[TWA 0-24hrs (90% CI)]

*sAPPb

[TWA 0-24hrs (90% CI)]

12 mg

(n=8)

43%

(37-49%)

47%

(39-54%)

37%

(32-41%)

40 mg

(n=8)

21%

(15-27%)

29%

(21-36%)

17%

(13-22%)

60 mg

(n=8)

16%

(10-22%)

19%

(11-26%)

12%

(7-17%)

*Percentage concentration relative to baseline averaged over 24 hours following administration of MK-8931 for 7 days (time weighted average from 0-24 hours post dose, (TWA 0-24hrs).

CI=confidence interval

No serious adverse events or study discontinuations due to adverse events were recorded. Analysis of vital signs and laboratory assessments, including liver function tests, showed no statistically significant changes related to the administration of MK-8931. Adverse events reported in two or more subjects in at least one dose group included: headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, insomnia and back pain. All adverse events were generally mild to moderate in intensity and transient in duration. No dose-dependent increase in the incidence of adverse events was observed.

Previously, Merck researchers presented findings of a single dose Phase I study at the 2012 American Academy of Neurology (AAN) Annual Meeting, which demonstrated that administration of MK-8931 to healthy volunteers resulted in a reduction of Ab40 CSF levels of greater than 90 percent from baseline.

Other MK-8931 Presentations at AAIC 2013

  • Consistency of BACE1-mediated Brain Amyloid Production Inhibition by MK-8931 in Alzheimer’s Patients and Healthy Young Adults (Oral Session; July 17, 2013; 2:15 PM; Presentation #O4-05-05)

About the EPOCH Study

EPOCH (NCT01739348) is a 78-week, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, double-blind Phase II/III clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of three oral doses of MK-8931 (12, 40 or 60 mg) administered daily versus placebo in patients with mild to moderate AD. The study is currently enrolling the 200 patient Phase II portion of the study and is anticipated to enroll up to 1,700 patients in the main Phase III cohort. The primary efficacy outcomes of the study are the change from baseline in Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Subscale (ADAS-Cog) score and the change from baseline in the Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study – Activities of Daily Living (ADCS-ADL) score.

About BACE Inhibition and MK-8931

The amyloid hypothesis asserts that the formation of amyloid peptides that lead to amyloid plaque deposits in the brain is a primary contributor to the underlying cause of Alzheimer’s disease. BACE is believed to be a key enzyme in the production of amyloid β peptide. Evidence suggests that inhibiting BACE decreases the production of amyloid β peptide and may therefore reduce amyloid plaque formation and modify disease progression.

Merck is advancing several innovative mechanisms in Alzheimer’s disease, including candidates designed to modify disease progression and improve symptom control. Merck’s major effort in disease modification is our lead BACE inhibitor, MK-8931, and Merck is continuing to develop other BACE inhibitor candidates.

About Merck

Today’s Merck is a global healthcare leader working to help the world be well. Merck is known as MSD outside the United States and Canada. Through our prescription medicines, vaccines, biologic therapies, and consumer care and animal health products, we work with customers and operate in more than 140 countries to deliver innovative health solutions. We also demonstrate our commitment to increasing access to healthcare through far-reaching policies, programs and partnerships. For more information, visit www.merck.com and connect with us on Twitter,Facebook and YouTube.

Merck Forward-Looking Statement

This news release includes “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of Merck’s management and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. There can be no guarantees with respect to pipeline products that the products will receive the necessary regulatory approvals or that they will prove to be commercially successful. If underlying assumptions prove inaccurate or risks or uncertainties materialize, actual results may differ materially from those set forth in the forward-looking statements.

Risks and uncertainties include but are not limited to, general industry conditions and competition; general economic factors, including interest rate and currency exchange rate fluctuations; the impact of pharmaceutical industry regulation and health care legislation in the United States and internationally; global trends toward health care cost containment; technological advances, new products and patents attained by competitors; challenges inherent in new product development, including obtaining regulatory approval; Merck’s ability to accurately predict future market conditions; manufacturing difficulties or delays; financial instability of international economies and sovereign risk; dependence on the effectiveness of Merck’s patents and other protections for innovative products; and the exposure to litigation, including patent litigation, and/or regulatory actions.

Merck undertakes no obligation to publicly update any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Additional factors that could cause results to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements can be found in Merck’s 2012 Annual Report on Form 10-K and the company’s other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) available at the SEC’s Internet site (www.sec.gov).

# # #

Merck
Media Contacts:
Caroline Lappetito, 267-305-7639
or
Investor Contacts:
Carol Ferguson, 908-423-4465
or
Justin Holko, 908-423-5088

 

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

J R Soc Interface. 2013 Feb 20;10(82):20130006. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2013.0006. Print 2013 May 6.

The inverse association of cancer and Alzheimer’s: a bioenergetic mechanism.

Demetrius LASimon DK.

Source

Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA. ldemetr@oeb.harvard.edu

Screen Shot 2021-07-19 at 7.09.12 PM

Word Cloud By Danielle Smolyar

Abstract

The sporadic forms of cancer and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) are both age-related metabolic disorders. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the two diseases are distinct: cancer is described by essentially limitless replicative potential, whereas neuronal death is a key feature of AD. Studies of the origin of both diseases indicate that their sporadic forms are the result of metabolic dysregulation, and a compensatory increase in energy transduction that is inversely related. In cancer, the compensatory metabolic effect is the upregulation of glycolysis-the Warburg effect; in AD, a bioenergetic model based on the interaction between astrocytes and neurons indicates that the compensatory metabolic alteration is the upregulation of oxidative phosphorylation-an inverse Warburg effect. These two modes of metabolic alteration could contribute to an inverse relation between the incidence of the two diseases. We invoke this bioenergetic mechanism to furnish a molecular basis for an epidemiological observation, namely the incidence of sporadic forms of cancer and AD is inversely related. We furthermore exploit the molecular mechanisms underlying the diseases to propose common therapeutic strategies for cancer and AD based on metabolic intervention.

PMID: 23427097
PMCID: PMC3627084
 [Available on 2014/5/6]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23427097?goback=%2Egde_2171620_member_248103990

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Finding the Genetic Links in Common Disease:  Caveats of Whole Genome Sequencing Studies

Writer and Reporter: Stephen J. Williams, Ph.D.

In the November 23, 2012 issue of Science, Jocelyn Kaiser reports (Genetic Influences On Disease Remain Hidden in News and Analysis)[1] on the difficulties that many genomic studies are encountering correlating genetic variants to high risk of type 2 diabetes and heart disease.  At the recent American Society of Human Genetics annual 2012 meeting, results of several DNA sequencing studies reported difficulties in finding genetic variants and links to high risk type 2 diabetes and heart disease.  These studies were a part of an international effort to determine the multiple genetic events contributing to complex, common diseases like diabetes.  Unlike Mendelian inherited diseases (like ataxia telangiectasia) which are characterized by defects mainly in one gene, finding genetic links to more complex diseases may pose a problem as outlined in the article:

  • Variants may be so rare that massive number of patient’s genome would need to be analyzed
  • For most diseases, individual SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms) raise risk modestly
  • Hard to find isolated families (hemophilia) or isolated populations (Ashkenazi Jew)
  • Disease-influencing genes have not been weeded out by natural selection after human population explosion (~5000 years ago) resulted in numerous gene variants
  • What percentage variants account for disease heritability (studies have shown this is as low as 26% for diabetes with the remaining risk determined by environment)

Although many genome-wide-associations studies have found SNPs that have causality to increasing risk diseases such as cancer, diabetes, and heart disease, most individual SNPs for common diseases raise risk by about only 20-40% and would be useless for predicting an individual’s chance they will develop disease and be a candidate for a personalized therapy approach.  Therefore, for common diseases, investigators are relying on direct exome sequencing and whole-genome sequencing to detect these medium-rare risk variants, rather than relying on genome-wide association studies (which are usually fine for detecting the higher frequency variants associated with common diseases).

Three of the many projects (one for heart risk and two for diabetes risk) are highlighted in the article:

1.  National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Exome Sequencing Project (ESP)[2]: heart, lung, blood

  • Sequenced 6,700 exomes of European or African descent
  • Majority of variants linked to disease too rare (as low as one variant)
  • Groups of variants in the same gene confirmed link between APOC3 and higher risk for early-onset heart attack
  • No other significant gene variants linked with heart disease

2.  T2D-GENES Consortium: diabetes

Sequenced 5,300 exomes of type 2 diabetes patients and controls from five ancestry groups
SNP in PAX4 gene associated with disease in East Asians
No low-frequency variant with large effect though

3.  GoT2D: diabetes

  • After sequencing 2700 patient’s exomes and whole genome no new rare variants above 1.5% frequency with a strong effect on diabetes risk

A nice article by Dr. Sowmiya Moorthie entitled Involvement of rare variants in common disease can be found at the PGH Foundation site http://www.phgfoundation.org/news/5164/ further discusses this conundrum,  and is summarized below:

“Although GWAs have identified many SNPs associated with common disease, they have as yet had little success in identifying the causative genetic variants. Those that have been identified have only a weak effect on disease risk, and therefore only explain a small proportion of the heritable, genetic component of susceptibility to that disease. This has led to the common disease-common variant hypothesis, which predicts that common disease-causing genetic variants exist in all human populations, but each individual variant will necessarily only have a small effect on disease susceptibility (i.e. a low associated relative risk).

An alternative hypothesis is the common disease, many rare variants hypothesis, which postulates that disease is caused by multiple strong-effect variants, each of which is only found in a few individuals. Dickson et al. in a paper in PLoS Biology postulate that these rare variants can be indirectly associated with common variants; they call these synthetic associations and demonstrate how further investigation could help explain findings from GWA studies [Dickson et al. (2010) PLoS Biol. 8(1):e1000294][3].  In simulation experiments, 30% of synthetic associations were caused by the presence of rare causative variants and furthermore, the strength of the association with common variants also increased if the number of rare causative variants increased. “

one_of_many rare variants

Figure from Dr. Moorthie’s article showing the problem of “finding one in many”.

(please   click to enlarge)

Indeed, other examples of such issues concerning gene variant association studies occur with other common diseases such as neurologic diseases and obesity, where it has been difficult to clearly and definitively associate any variant with prediction of risk.

For example, Nuytemans et. al.[4] used exome sequencing to find variants in the vascular protein sorting 3J (VPS35) and eukaryotic transcription initiation factor 4  gamma1 (EIF4G1) genes, tow genes causally linked to Parkinson’s Disease (PD).  Although they identified novel VPS35 variants none of these variants could be correlated to higher risk of PD.   One EIF4G1 variant seemed to be a strong Parkinson’s Disease risk factor however there was “no evidence for an overall contribution of genetic variability in VPS35 or EIF4G1 to PD development”.

These negative results may have relevance as companies such as 23andme (www.23andme.com) claim to be able to test for Parkinson’s predisposition.  To see a description of the LLRK2 mutational analysis which they use to determine risk for the disease please see the following link: https://www.23andme.com/health/Parkinsons-Disease/. This company and other like it have been subjects of posts on this site (Personalized Medicine: Clinical Aspiration of Microarrays)

However there seems to be more luck with strategies focused on analyzing intronic sequence rather than exome sequence. Jocelyn Kaiser’s Science article notes this in a brief interview with Harry Dietz of Johns Hopkins University where he suspects that “much of the missing heritability lies in gene-gene interactions”.  Oliver Harismendy and Kelly Frazer and colleagues’ recent publication in Genome Biology  http://genomebiology.com/content/11/11/R118 support this notion[5].  The authors used targeted resequencing of two endocannabinoid metabolic enzyme genes (fatty-acid-amide hydrolase (FAAH) and monoglyceride lipase (MGLL) in 147 normal weight and 142 extremely obese patients.

These patients were enrolled in the CRESCENDO trial and patients analyzed were of European descent. However, instead of just exome sequencing, the group resequenced exome AND intronic sequence, especially focusing on promoter regions.   They identified 1,448 single nucleotide variants but using a statistical filter (called RareCover which is referred to as a collapsing method) they found 4 variants in the promoters and intronic areas of the FAAH and MGLL genes which correlated to body mass index.  It should be noted that anandamide, a substrate for FAAH, is elevated in obese patients. The authors did note some issues though mentioning that “some other loci, more weakly or inconsistently associated in the original GWASs, were not replicated in our samples, which is not too surprising given the sample size of our cohort is inadequate to replicate modest associations”.

PLEASE WATCH VIDEO on the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute Exome Sequencing Project

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Qr5ahk1HEI

REFERENCES

http://www.phgfoundation.org/news/5164/  PHG Foundation

1.            Kaiser J: Human genetics. Genetic influences on disease remain hidden. Science 2012, 338(6110):1016-1017.

2.            Tennessen JA, Bigham AW, O’Connor TD, Fu W, Kenny EE, Gravel S, McGee S, Do R, Liu X, Jun G et al: Evolution and functional impact of rare coding variation from deep sequencing of human exomes. Science 2012, 337(6090):64-69.

3.            Dickson SP, Wang K, Krantz I, Hakonarson H, Goldstein DB: Rare variants create synthetic genome-wide associations. PLoS biology 2010, 8(1):e1000294.

4.            Nuytemans K, Bademci G, Inchausti V, Dressen A, Kinnamon DD, Mehta A, Wang L, Zuchner S, Beecham GW, Martin ER et al: Whole exome sequencing of rare variants in EIF4G1 and VPS35 in Parkinson disease. Neurology 2013, 80(11):982-989.

5.            Harismendy O, Bansal V, Bhatia G, Nakano M, Scott M, Wang X, Dib C, Turlotte E, Sipe JC, Murray SS et al: Population sequencing of two endocannabinoid metabolic genes identifies rare and common regulatory variants associated with extreme obesity and metabolite level. Genome biology 2010, 11(11):R118.

Other posts on this site related to Genomics include:

Cancer Biology and Genomics for Disease Diagnosis

Diagnosis of Cardiovascular Disease, Treatment and Prevention: Current & Predicted Cost of Care and the Promise of Individualized Medicine Using Clinical Decision Support Systems

Ethical Concerns in Personalized Medicine: BRCA1/2 Testing in Minors and Communication of Breast Cancer Risk

Genomics & Genetics of Cardiovascular Disease Diagnoses: A Literature Survey of AHA’s Circulation Cardiovascular Genetics, 3/2010 – 3/2013

Genomics-based cure for diabetes on-the-way

Personalized Medicine: Clinical Aspiration of Microarrays

Late Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease and One-carbon Metabolism

Genetics of Disease: More Complex is How to Creating New Drugs

Genetics of Conduction Disease: Atrioventricular (AV) Conduction Disease (block): Gene Mutations – Transcription, Excitability, and Energy Homeostasis

Centers of Excellence in Genomic Sciences (CEGS): NHGRI to Fund New CEGS on the Brain: Mental Disorders and the Nervous System

Cancer Genomic Precision Therapy: Digitized Tumor’s Genome (WGSA) Compared with Genome-native Germ Line: Flash-frozen specimen and Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded Specimen Needed

Mitochondrial Metabolism and Cardiac Function

Pancreatic Cancer: Genetics, Genomics and Immunotherapy

Issues in Personalized Medicine in Cancer: Intratumor Heterogeneity and Branched Evolution Revealed by Multiregion Sequencing

Quantum Biology And Computational Medicine

Personalized Cardiovascular Genetic Medicine at Partners HealthCare and Harvard Medical School

Centers of Excellence in Genomic Sciences (CEGS): NHGRI to Fund New CEGS on the Brain: Mental Disorders and the Nervous System

LEADERS in Genome Sequencing of Genetic Mutations for Therapeutic Drug Selection in Cancer Personalized Treatment: Part 2

Consumer Market for Personal DNA Sequencing: Part 4

Personalized Medicine: An Institute Profile – Coriell Institute for Medical Research: Part 3

Whole-Genome Sequencing Data will be Stored in Coriell’s Spin off For-Profit Entity

 

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Late Onset of Alzheimer’s Disease and One-carbon Metabolism

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

Abbreviations:

AD (Alzheimer’s disease)

amyloid-beta ()

late onset AD (LOAD)

GSK-3β (glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta)

PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A)

homocysteine (HCY)

S-adenosylmethionine (SAM)

methionine synthase (MS)

betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase (BHMT)

cystathionine beta synthase (CBS)

cysteine (Cys)

glutathione (GSH)

S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH)

adenosine (Ado)

presenilin 1 (PSEN1)

beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE)

The two main molecular signs of AD are:

  • Extracellular deposits of Amyloid-beta (Aβ) peptides (amyloidogenic pathway) and
  • Intracellular deposits of phosphorylated protein TAU (fibrillogenic pathway)

For many years, both these two pathways (amyloidogenic and fibrillogenic) contended the role of “responsible” for AD onset in the researchers’ debates, even originating respectively the two groups of “BAptists” and “TAUists” scientists. In the recent years, however, these absolutist hypotheses were confuted by the emerging data evidencing that late onset AD (LOAD) has the characteristics to be considered a multifactorial disease and by scientific reports demonstrating possible interconnection between (but not limited to) the two above-mentioned “pathogenic” pathways.

For example, it was demonstrated that

  • GSK-3β (glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta), a phosphorylase involved in tau phosphorylation, is also responsible for APP (Amyloid Precursor Protein) phosphorylation and that
  • Aβ peptides are able to induce GSK-3β.

Among the several possible cocauses and interconnected pathways involved in LOAD onset and progression, a very rapidly emerging topic is related to the role of epigenetics. Moreover, it was hypothesized that methylation impairment could be a common promoter and/or a connection between amyloid and tau pathogenic pathways involving not only DNA methylation but also protein methylation mechanisms. This observation rises from studies on PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A) protein methylation showing that downregulation of neuronal PP2A methylation occurs in affected brain regions from AD patients, causing the accumulation of both phosphorylated tau and APP isoforms and increased secretion of Aβ peptides.

Altered methylation metabolism could represent the connection between B vitamins and LOAD. B vitamins are essential cofactors of homocysteine (HCY) metabolism, also called 1-carbon metabolism. One-carbon metabolism is a complex biochemical pathway regulated by the presence of folate, vitamin B12 and B6 (among other metabolites), and leading to the production of methyl donor molecule S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). High HCY and low B vitamin levels are associated to LOAD, even if a cause-effect relationship is still far to be ascertained; moreover, a clear correlation between HCY and Aβ levels has been found.

In addition, SAM, the principal metabolite in the HCY cycle and the main methyl donor in eukaryotes, appears to be altered in some neurological disorders, including AD. HCY, a thiol containing amino acid produced during the methionine metabolism via the adenosylated compound SAM, once formed is either converted to cysteine by transsulfuration or remethylated to form methionine. In the remethylation pathway HCY is remethylated by the vitamin B12-dependent enzyme methionine synthase (MS) using 5-methyltetrahydrofolate as cosubstrate. Alternatively, mainly in liver, betaine can donate a methyl group in a vitamin B12-independent reaction, catalyzed by betaine-homocysteine methyltransferase (BHMT). In the transsulfuration pathway, HCY can condense with serine to form cystathionine in a reaction catalyzed by the cystathionine beta synthase (CBS), a vitamin B6-dependent enzyme, and the cystathionine is hydrolyzed to cysteine (Cys). Cysteine is used for protein synthesis, metabolized to sulfate, or used for glutathione (GSH) synthesis. The tripeptide GSH is the most abundant intracellular nonprotein thiol, and it is a versatile reductant, serving multiple biological functions, acting, among others, as a quencher of free radicals and a cosubstrate in the enzymatic reduction of peroxides. HCY accumulation causes the accumulation of S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) because of the reversibility of the reaction converting SAH to HCY and adenosine (Ado); the equilibrium dynamic favors SAH synthesis. The reaction proceeds in the hydrolytic direction only if HCY and adenosine are efficiently removed. SAH is a strong DNA methyltransferases inhibitor, which reinforces DNA hypomethylation (Chiang et al., 1996). Thus, an alteration of the metabolism through either remethylation or transsulfuration pathways can lead to hyperhomocysteinemia, decrease of SAM/SAH ratio (methylation potential; MP), and alteration of GSH levels, suggesting that hypomethylation is a mechanism through which HCY is involved in vascular disease and AD, together with the oxidative damage. To add insult to injury, oxidative stress also promotes the formation of oxidized derivatives of HCY, like homocysteic acid and homocysteine sulfinic acid. These compounds, through the interaction with glutamate receptors, generate intracellular free radicals.

The first observations about B vitamins or HCY deficiency in neurological disorders were hypothesized in the 80 seconds. Despite this recent acknowledgement, alterations of HCY levels and related compounds were only recently widely recognized as risk factors for LOAD and other forms of dementia. Few mechanisms are suggested as possible protagonists in the toxic pathway of HCY in LOAD onset:

  • oxidative stress and neurotoxicity,
  • vascular damage,
  • alteration of cholesterol and lipids,
  • alteration of protein function by methylation and
  • deregulation of gene expression by DNA methylation.

These results were obtained by using both transgenic and dietary models of hyperhomocysteinemia or altered 1-carbon metabolism. On the one hand, this variety of experimental models allowed to investigate multiple aspects of the biochemical alterations and their consequences; on the other, the lacking of common methods or goals generated a large body of literature in part overlapping for some aspects but fragmentary or incomplete for others. This aspect represents, together with the scarce interplay between clinical/epidemiological and biomolecular research, one of the reasons for the poor relevance given by the scientific community to the role of 1-carbon metabolism in certain diseases like dementia.

A causal connection between 1-carbon alterations:

  • hyperhomocysteinemia,
  • low B vitamins,
  • low SAM, or
  • high SAH

and biological alterations responsible for LOAD onset and progression is still missing. So, it was previously demonstrated that 1-carbon metabolism was related to AD-like hallmarks (increased Aβ production) via PSEN1 (presenilin 1) and BACE (beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1) upregulation in cellular and animal models. More recently, it was added to the rising literature body dealing with 1-carbon metabolism and GSK-3β and PP2A modulation; it was also demonstrated that PSEN1 promoter is regulated by site-specific DNA methylation in cell cultures and mice and that this modulation of methylation is dependent on the regulation of the DNA methylation machinery. Although all the proposed pathways of HCY toxicity are possibly involved and nonmutually exclusive, as suggested by the multifactorial origin of LOAD, the recent advances in the connection between epigenetics and LOAD (as discussed above) stress a primary role for methylation dishomeostasis dependent on 1-carbon metabolism alterations.

Source References:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0197458011000741

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0306987784901543

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1044743107002953

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1196/annals.1297.059/abstract;jsessionid=FE6A683C10230B201295DDF1388DAC68.d02t01

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa011613

Other articles related to this topic were published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, including the following:

Introduction to Nanotechnology and Alzheimer disease

Tilda Barliya PhD, RN 03/14/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/14/introduction-to-nanotechnology-and-alzheimer-disease/

Alzheimer’s disease conundrum – Are we near the end of the puzzle?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP, RN 03/09/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/09/alzheimers-disease-conundrum-are-we-near-the-end-of-the-puzzle/

Ustekinumab New Drug Therapy for Cognitive Decline resulting from Neuroinflammatory Cytokine Signaling and Alzheimer’s Disease

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 02/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/27/ustekinumab-new-drug-therapy-for-cognitive-decline-resulting-from-neuroinflammatory-cytokine-signaling-and-alzheimers-disease/

The Alzheimer Scene around the Web

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter, RN 11/02/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/02/the-alzheimer-scene-around-the-web/

Alzheimer’s before Symptoms show: Imaging Techniques for Detection and Pre-Clinical Diagnosis

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 09/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/29/alzheimers-before-symptoms-show-imaging-techniques-for-detection-and-pre-clinical-diagnosis/

Blood markers for Alzheimer’s disease

Dr. Venkat S Karra, Ph.D., RN 09/05/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/05/blood-markers-for-alzheimers-disease/

THREE new drugs for Alzheimer’s Disease: Two Antibodies against AMYLOID and one IV Immune Globulin

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 07/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/17/three-new-drugs-for-alzheimers-disease-two-antibodies-against-amyloid-and-one-iv-immune-globulin/

New ADNI Project to Perform Whole-genome Sequencing of Alzheimer’s Patients,

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 07/03/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/03/new-adni-project-to-perform-whole-genome-sequencing-of-alzheimers-patients/

New Bio-markers in Alzheimer’s & Stress Induced Changes in the Brains of Alzheimer’s Patients

Dr. Venkat S Karra, Ph.D., RN 06/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/26/new-bio-markers-in-alzeihmers-stress-induced-changes-in-the-brains-of-alzheimers-patients/

 

How Methionine Imbalance with Sulfur-Insufficiency Leads to Hyperhomocysteinemia

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 04/04/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/04/sulfur-deficiency-and-hyperhomocusteinemia/

 

Problems of vegetarianism

Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D., RN 04/22/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/22/problems-of-vegetarianism/

 

Amyloidosis with Cardiomyopathy

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 03/31/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/31/amyloidosis-with-cardiomyopathy/

 

Liver endoplasmic reticulum stress and hepatosteatosis

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 03/10/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/10/liver-endoplasmic-reticulum-stress-and-hepatosteatosis/

 

Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 12/25/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/25/assessing-cardiovascular-disease-with-biomarkers/

 

Telling NO to Cardiac Risk

Stephen J. Williams, PhD, RN 12/10/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/10/telling-no-to-cardiac-risk/

 

A Second Look at the Transthyretin Nutrition Inflammatory Conundrum

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 12/03/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/03/a-second-look-at-the-transthyretin-nutrition-inflammatory-conundrum/

 

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

 

The Molecular Biology of Renal Disorders: Nitric Oxide – Part III

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/the-molecular-biology-of-renal-disorders/

 

Nitric Oxide Function in Coagulation

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/nitric-oxide-function-in-coagulation/

 

The Potential for Nitric Oxide Donors in Renal Function Disorders

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/20/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/20/the-potential-for-nitric-oxide-donors-in-renal-function-disorders/

 

Nitric Oxide, Platelets, Endothelium and Hemostasis

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/08/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/08/nitric-oxide-platelets-endothelium-and-hemostasis/

 

Expanding the Genetic Alphabet and linking the genome to the metabolome

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/24/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/24/expanding-the-genetic-alphabet-and-linking-the-genome-to-the-metabolome/

 

Interaction of Nitric Oxide and Prostacyclin in Vascular Endothelium

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/14/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/14/interaction-of-nitric-oxide-and-prostacyclin-in-vascular-endothelium/

 

Positioning a Therapeutic Concept for Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs — Therapeutic Indications for Macrovascular Disease: Coronary, Cerebrovascular and Peripheral

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 08/29/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/29/positioning-a-therapeutic-concept-for-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs-therapeutic-indications-for-macrovascular-disease-coronary-cerebrovascular-and-peripheral/

 

Drug Eluting Stents: On MIT’s Edelman Lab’s Contributions to Vascular Biology and its Pioneering Research on DES

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 04/25/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/25/contributions-to-vascular-biology/

 

Personalized Medicine in NSCLC

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 03/03/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/03/personalized-medicine-in-nsclc/

 

Nitric Oxide and Immune Responses: Part 2

Aviral Vatsa PhD, MBBS, RN 10/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/28/nitric-oxide-and-immune-responses-part-2/

 

Mitochondrial Damage and Repair under Oxidative Stress

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/28/mitochondrial-damage-and-repair-under-oxidative-stress/

 

Is the Warburg Effect the cause or the effect of cancer: A 21st Century View?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/17/is-the-warburg-effect-the-cause-or-the-effect-of-cancer-a-21st-century-view/

 

Ubiquitin-Proteosome pathway, Autophagy, the Mitochondrion, Proteolysis and Cell Apoptosis: Part III

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 02/14/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/14/ubiquinin-proteosome-pathway-autophagy-the-mitochondrion-proteolysis-and-cell-apoptosis-reconsidered/

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

Nitric Oxide and iNOS have Key Roles in Kidney Diseases – Part II

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/nitric-oxide-and-inos-have-key-roles-in-kidney-diseases/

New Insights on Nitric Oxide donors – Part IV

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/new-insights-on-no-donors/

The Essential Role of Nitric Oxide and Therapeutic NO Donor Targets in Renal Pharmacotherapy

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/the-essential-role-of-nitric-oxide-and-therapeutic-no-donor-targets-in-renal-pharmacotherapy/

Paclitaxel vs Abraxane (albumin-bound paclitaxel)

Tilda Barliya PhD, RN 11/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/17/paclitaxel-vs-abraxane-albumin-bound-paclitaxel/

Ubiquinin-Proteosome pathway, autophagy, the mitochondrion, proteolysis and cell apoptosis

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/30/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/30/ubiquinin-proteosome-pathway-autophagy-the-mitochondrion-proteolysis-and-cell-apoptosis/

Advances in Separations Technology for the “OMICs” and Clarification of Therapeutic Targets

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 10/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/22/advances-in-separations-technology-for-the-omics-and-clarification-of-therapeutic-targets/

Nitric Oxide and Immune Responses: Part 1

Aviral Vatsa PhD, MBBS, RN 10/18/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/18/nitric-oxide-and-immune-responses-part-1/

Crucial role of Nitric Oxide in Cancer

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D., RN 10/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/16/crucial-role-of-nitric-oxide-in-cancer/

Nitric Oxide Covalent Modifications: A Putative Therapeutic Target?

Stephen J. Williams, PhD, RN 09/24/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/24/nitric-oxide-covalent-modifications-a-putative-therapeutic-target/

Nitric Oxide Signalling Pathways

Aviral Vatsa, PhD, MBBS, RN 08/22/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/22/nitric-oxide-signalling-pathways/

Proteomics and Biomarker Discovery

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 08/21/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/21/proteomics-and-biomarker-discovery/

The rationale and use of inhaled NO in Pulmonary Artery Hypertension and Right Sided Heart Failure

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 08/20/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/20/the-rationale-and-use-of-inhaled-no-in-pulmonary-artery-hypertension-and-right-sided-heart-failure/

Bystolic’s generic Nebivolol – positive effect on circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells endogenous augmentation

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 07/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/16/bystolics-generic-nebivolol-positive-effect-on-circulating-endothilial-progrnetor-cells-endogenous-augmentation/

The mechanism of action of the drug ‘Acthar’ for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)

 Dr. Venkat S. Karra, Ph.D., RN 07/08/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/08/the-mechanism-of-action-of-the-drug-acthar-for-systemic-lupus-erythematosus-sle/

Arthritis, Cancer: New Screening Technique Yields Elusive Compounds to Block Immune-Regulating Enzyme

Prabodh Kandala, PhD, RN 05/11/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/11/arthritis-cancer-new-screening-technique-yields-elusive-compounds-to-block-immune-regulating-enzyme/

In Focus: Targeting of Cancer Stem Cells

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 03/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/27/in-focus-targeting-of-cancer-stem-cells/

Novel Cancer Hypothesis Suggests Antioxidants Are Harmful

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 01/27/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/27/novel-cancer-hypothesis-suggests-antioxidants-are-harmful/

What can we expect of tumor therapeutic response?

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 12/05/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/05/what-can-we-expect-of-tumor-therapeutic-response/

Nitric Oxide has a ubiquitous role in the regulation of glycolysis -with a concomitant influence on mitochondrial function

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/16/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/16/nitric-oxide-has-a-ubiquitous-role-in-the-regulation-of-glycolysis-with-a-concomitant-influence-on-mitochondrial-function/

Targeting Mitochondrial-bound Hexokinase for Cancer Therapy

Ziv Raviv, PhD, RN 04/06/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/06/targeting-mitochondrial-bound-hexokinase-for-cancer-therapy/

Genomics-based cure for diabetes on-the-way

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 03/04/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/04/genomics-based-cure-for-diabetes-on-the-way/

PLATO Trial on ACS: BRILINTA (ticagrelor) better than Plavix® (clopidogrel bisulfate): Lowering chances of having another heart attack

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 12/28/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/28/plato-trial-on-acs-brilinta-ticagrelor-better-than-plavix-clopidogrel-bisulfate-lowering-chances-of-having-another-heart-attack/

Biochemistry of the Coagulation Cascade and Platelet Aggregation – Part I

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 11/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/biochemistry-of-the-coagulation-cascade-and-platelet-aggregation/

Mitochondria: Origin from oxygen free environment, role in aerobic glycolysis, metabolic adaptation

Larry H Bernstein, MD, FACP, RN 09/26/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/26/mitochondria-origin-from-oxygen-free-environment-role-in-aerobic-glycolysis-metabolic-adaptation/

Mitochondrial Mechanisms of Disease in Diabetes Mellitus

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 08/01/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/01/mitochondrial-mechanisms-of-disease-in-diabetes-mellitus/

Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of Agent Alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN 07/19/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/19/cardiovascular-disease-cvd-and-the-role-of-agent-alternatives-in-endothelial-nitric-oxide-synthase-enos-activation-and-nitric-oxide-production/

Mitochondria: More than just the “powerhouse of the cell”

Ritu Saxena, Ph.D, RN 07/09/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/09/mitochondria-more-than-just-the-powerhouse-of-the-cell/

Ovarian Cancer and fluorescence-guided surgery: A report

Tilda Barliya PhD, RN 01/19/2013

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/19/ovarian-cancer-and-fluorescence-guided-surgery-a-report/

NO Nutritional remedies for hypertension and atherosclerosis. It’s 12 am: do you know where your electrons are?

Meg Baker, Ph.D., Registered Patent Agent, RN 10/07/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/07/no-nutritional-remedies-for-hypertension-and-atherosclerosis-its-12-am-do-you-know-where-your-electrons-are/

High Doses of Certain Dietary Supplements Increase Cancer Risk

Prabodh Kandala, PhD, RN 05/17/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/17/high-doses-of-certain-dietary-supplements-increase-cancer-risk/

Read Full Post »

 

e-Recognition via Friction-free Collaboration over the Internet: “Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research”

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is ArticleID-31.png

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

Journal Site Statistics UPDATED on 7/22/2014

Scientific Journal Site Statistics

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com

415,392 Views

2,093 Posts

241 Categories

6,066 Tags

6,755 Comments

Referrer   Views
Search Engines   175,831
linkedin.com   14,321
Facebook   3,586
Twitter   1,223
investorshub.advfn.com   1,058
 3/05/2014  338,938  1,717  1,830  965

Date

Views to Date

# of articles

NIH Clicks

Nature Clicks

6/24/2013

 199,857

 1,034

 1,275

 661

 7/29/2013  217,356  1,138  1,389  705
 12/1/2013  287,645  1,428  1,676  828
 2/09/2014  325,039  1,665  1,793  892
 7/22/2014  415,392  2,093  2,014  1,132

Top Authors for all days ending 2014-03-05 (Summarized)

AUTHOR ID

VIEWS

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN [2012pharmaceutical]

131,222

larryhbern

59,751

tildabarliya

22,372

Dr. Sudipta Saha

14,737

Dror Nir

11,550

sjwilliamspa

12,059

ritusaxena

10,210

aviralvatsa

5,428

zraviv06

3,170

Demet Sag, Ph.D., CRA, GCP

3,741

anamikasarkar

2,360

pkandala

1,908

zs22

1,895

Alan F. Kaul, PharmD., MS, MBA, FCCP

1,420

megbaker58

1,107

Aashir Awan, Phd

945

jdpmdphd

569

UPDATED on 10/14/2013 

Cardiovascular Original Research: Cases in Methodology Design for Content Curation and Co-Curation

 

UPDATED on 4/8/2013

This article has three parts.

Part 1,  presents a pioneering experience in Curation of Scientific Research of three forms:

Part 2, presents Views of two Curators on the transformation of Scientific Publishing and the functioning of the Scientific AGORA (market place in the Ancient Greek CIty of Athena).

Part 3, presents the

“Beall’s list” a blacklist of “predatory” journals: Scientific Articles to be Accepted for Publications followed by a Bill to Pay for been Published

Part One

 

e-Recognition for Author Views is presented below of a pioneering launch of the ONE and ONLY web-based Open Access Online Scientific Journal on frontiers in Biomedical Technologies, Genomics, Biological SciencesHealthcare Economics, Pharmacology, Pharmaceutical & Medicine.

Friction-free Collaboration over the Internet: An Equity Sharing Venture for “Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research” launched THREE TYPES of Scientific Research Sharing

Type 1:

“Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research – Online Scientific Journal

 http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com

The venture, Leaders in Pharmaceutical Business Intelligence, operates as an online scientific intellectual EXCHANGE – an Open Access Online Scientific Journal for curation and reporting on frontiers in Biomedical, Genomics, Biological SciencesHealthcare Economics, Pharmacology, Pharmaceutical & Medicine. The website,  http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com , is a scientific, medical and business multi expert authoring environment  in several domains of  LIFE SCIENCES, PHARMACEUTICAL, HEALTHCARE & MEDICINE INDUSTRIES.

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/open-access-scientific-journal/about/

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/contributors-biographies/

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/contributors-biographies/aviva-lev-ari/

Our organic in growth ONTOLOGY includes ~ 90 Research Categories, i.e.,

  •  Advanced Drug Manufacturing Technology
  •  Alzheimer’s Disease
    •  Etiology
    •  Medical Device Therapies for Altzheimer’s disease
    •  Pharmacotherapy
  •  Bio Instrumentation in Experimental Life Sciences Research
  •  Biological Networks, Gene Regulation and Evolution
  •  Biomarkers & Medical Diagnostics
  •  BioSimilars
  •  Bone Disease and Musculoskeletal Disease
  •  CANCER BIOLOGY & Innovations in Cancer Therapy
  •  Cancer Prevention: Research & Programs
  •  Cardiovascular Pharmaceutical Genomics
  •  Cell Biology, Signaling & Cell Circuits
  •  Cerebrovascular and Neurodegenerative Diseases
  •  Chemical Biology and its relations to Metabolic Disease
  •  Chemical Genetics
  •  Coagulation Therapy and Internal Bleeding
  •  Computational Biology/Systems and Bioinformatics
  •  Disease Biology, Small Molecules in Development of Therapeutic Drugs
  •  Drug Delivery Platform Technology
  •  Ecosystems & Industrial Concentration in the Medical Device Sector
    •  Cardiac & Vascular Repair Tools Subsegment
    •  Exec Compensation in the Cardiac & Vascular Repair Tools Subsegment
    •  Massachusetts Niche Suppliers and National Leaders
  •  FDA Regulatory Affairs
    •  FDA, CE Mark & Global Regulatory Affairs: process management and strategic planning – GCP, GLP, ISO 14155
    •  ISO 10993 for Product Registration: FDA & CE Mark for Development of Medical Devices and Diagnostics
  •  Frontiers in Cardiology
    •  Medical Devices
      •  Stents & Tools
      •  Valves & Tools
    •  Pharmacotherapy of Cardiovascular Disease
      •  HTN
      •  HTN in Youth
      •  Resident-cell-based
    •  Procedures
      •  Aortic Valve: TAVI, TAVI vs Open Heart Surgery
      •  CABG
      •  Mitral Valve: Repair and Replacement
      •  PCI
      •  Renal Denervation
  •  Genome Biology
  •  Genomic Endocrinology, Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis and Reproductive Genomics
  •  Genomic Testing: Methodology for Diagnosis
  •  Glycobiology: Biopharmaceutical Production, Pharmacodynamics and Pharmacokinetics
  •  Health Economics and Outcomes Research
  •  Health Law & Patient Safety
  •  HealthCare IT
  •  Human Immune System in Health and in Disease
  •  Human Sensation and Cellular Transduction: Physiology and Therapeutics
  •  Imaging-based Cancer Patient Management
  •  Infectious Disease & New Antibiotic Targets
  •  Innovations in Neurophysiology & Neuropsychology
  •  International Global Work in Pharmaceutical
  •  Interviews with Scientific Leaders
  •  Liver & Digestive Diseases Research
  •  Medical and Population Genetics
  •  Medical Devices R&D Investment
  •  Medical Imaging Technology, Image Processing/Computing, MRI
  •  Metabolomics
  •  Molecular Genetics & Pharmaceutical
  •  Nanotechnology for Drug Delivery
  •  Nitric Oxide in Health and Disease
  •  Nutrigenomics
  •  Nutrition
    •  Nutritional Supplements: Atherogenesis, lipid metabolism
  •  Origins of Cardiovascular Disease
    •  Atherogenic Processes & Pathology
  •  Pain: Etiology, Genetics & Innovations in Treatment
  •  Patient Experience: Personal Memories of Invasive Medical Intervantion
  •  Personalized Medicine & Genomic Research
  •  Pharmaceutical Analytics
  •  Pharmaceutical Industry Competitive Intelligence
  •  Pharmaceutical R&D Investment
  •  Pharmacogenomics
  •  Population Health Management, Genetics & Pharmaceutical
  •  Population Health Management, Nutrition and Phytochemistry
  •  Proteomics
  •  Regulated Clinical Trials: Design, Methods, Components and IRB related issues
  •  Reproductive Biology & Bio Instrumentation
  •  Scientist: Career considerations
  •  Statistical Methods for Research Evaluation
  •  Stem Cells for Regenerative Medicine
  •  Systemic Inflammatory Response Related Disorders
  •  Technology Transfer: Biotech and Pharmaceutical

Open Access Online Scientific Journal Site Statistics: Site Launched in February 2012, first post Published on 4/30/2012

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/04/30/93/

On 4/2/2013, less then one year since the first post was published as a CURATED article, we achieved the following results:

150,339 Views

766 Posts

87 Categories

3,908 Tags

3,706 Comments

Referrer   Views
Search Engines   43,238
linkedin.com   9,865
Google   2,171
Facebook   1,591
     

URL    Clicks

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov    1,014

nature.com    513

genomeweb.com    215

medicregister.com    177

sciencedirect.com    156

pnas.org    145

nejm.org    125

 

Author        Views

 

2012pharmaceutical        51,214 <<<<—- Aviva

 

larryhbern    Following    19,819

 

tildabarliya        6,924

 

Dr. Sudipta Saha    Following    6,859

 

ritusaxena    Following    5,795

 

Dror Nir    Follow    4,190

 

sjwilliamspa    Following    3,369

 

aviralvatsa    Following    3,216

 

anamikasarkar    Following    1,682

 

pkandala    Follow    1,595

 

Alan F. Kaul, PharmD., MS, MBA, FCCP    Following    1,068

 

megbaker58    Following    826

 

zs22    Following    444

 

zraviv06    Following    438

 

Aashir Awan, Phd    Following    413

 

howarddonohue    Following    297

 

Ed Kislauskis    Following    157

 

Demet Sag    Follow    130

 

jukkakarjalainen    Follow    130

 

anayou1    Following    128

 

jdpmdphd    Follow    124

 

Dr.Sreedhar Tirunagari    Follow    92

 

S. Chakrabarti, Ph.D.    Following    49

 

apreconasia    Follow    43

Most Viewed Posts

Is the Warburg Effect the cause or the effect of cancer: A 21st Century View? More stats 1,945
Perspectives on Nitric Oxide in Disease Mechanisms More stats 1,925
About More stats 1,836
Contributors’ Biographies More stats 1,639
Founder More stats 1,026
Future of Calcitonin…? More stats 854
Treatment of Refractory Hypertension via Percutaneous Renal Denervation More stats 851
‘Gamifying’ Drug R&D: Boehringer Ingelheim, Sanofi, Eli Lilly More stats 835
Biosimilars: Intellectual Property Creation and Protection by Pioneer and by Biosimilar Manufacturers More stats 824
The mechanism of action of the drug ‘Acthar’ for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) More stats 737
Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI): Risky and Costly More stats 691
Closing the Mammography gap More stats 667
Nitric Oxide has a ubiquitous role in the regulation of glycolysis -with a concomitant influence on mitochondrial function More stats 659
Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers More stats 629
Introduction to Tissue Engineering; Nanotechnology applications More stats 613
Novel Cancer Hypothesis Suggests Antioxidants Are Harmful More stats 602
Paradigm Shift in Human Genomics – Predictive Biomarkers and Personalized Medicine – Part 1 More stats 597
Mitochondria: Origin from oxygen free environment, role in aerobic glycolysis, metabolic adaptation More stats 593
DNA – The Next-Generation Storage Media for Digital Information More stats 588
“The Molecular pathology of Breast Cancer Progression” More stats 563
Zithromax – likely to ‘max’ Heart Attack More stats 557
TransCelerate BioPharma Inc. to Accelerate the Development of New Meds More stats 554
Sunitinib brings Adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) to Remission – RNA Sequencing – FLT3 Receptor Blockade More stats 549
Mitochondria: More than just the “powerhouse of the cell” More stats 537
Big Data in Genomic Medicine More stats 531
Get Rid of the Randomized Trial; Here’s a Better Way More stats 522
Biosimilars: CMC Issues and Regulatory Requirements More stats 521
Biosimilars: Financials 2012 vs. 2008 More stats 513
New England Compounding Center: A Family Business More stats 507
Every sperm is sacred: Sequencing DNA from individual cells vs “humans as a whole.” More stats 501

Most Commented 

Post Comments
Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs: Reduction Methods for CV Risk 25
Knowing the tumor’s size and location, could we target treatment to THE ROI by applying imaging-guided intervention? 24
Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of agent alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production 24
Is the Warburg Effect the cause or the effect of cancer: A 21st Century View? 23
Differentiation Therapy – Epigenetics Tackles Solid Tumors 22
Nitric Oxide and Immune Responses: Part 1 22
Nitric Oxide: Chemistry and function 22
Targeted delivery of therapeutics to bone and connective tissues: current status and challenges- Part I 21
Nano-particles as Synthetic Platelets to Stop Internal Bleeding Resulting from Trauma 21
Prostate Cancer Cells: Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors Induce Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition 20
Personalized medicine gearing up to tackle cancer 19

Type 2:

“Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research” – BioMed e-Books Series

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/biomed-e-books/

Launch on Amazon-KINDLE, KINDLE FIRE: 2013, 2014

Eight Authors: 40 articles — Any day on Amazon’s e-Books List

Volume 1: Seven Authors, 29 articles

Volume 2: Six Authors, 28 articles

Volume 3: Eight Authors, 43 articles

Volume 1: Eight Authors, 154 articles [65 posts by Larry, 56 posts by Aviva]

Volume 2: [Work-in-Progress]

Volume 3: [Work-in-Progress]

 

Type 3:

“Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research” – Scoop.it!

medical imaging of the heart
 

Cardiovascular Disease: Pharmaco-therapy

Drug Therapy for Heart Disease 

Curated by Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

“Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research” – Articles on this Topic covered in http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com

“Open Access Publishing” is becoming the mainstream model: “Academic Publishing” has changed Irrevocably

“Open Access Publishing” is becoming the mainstream model: “Academic Publishing” has changed Irrevocably

Digital Publishing Promotes Science and Popularizes it by Access to Scientific 

Open-Access Publishing in Genomics

Open-Access Publishing in Genomics

 

Part Two

Comprehensive analysis of the phenomena of “Open Access to Curation of Scientific Research” is presented below by two curated articles:

Views of Thomas Lin, NYT, 1/17/2012 – Cracking Open the Scientific Process

 
A GLOBAL FORUM Ijad Madisch, 31, a virologist and computer scientist, founded ResearchGate, a Berlin-based social networking platform for scientists that has more than 1.3 million members.
Published: January 16, 2012 

The New England Journal of Medicine marks its 200th anniversary this year with a timeline celebrating the scientific advances first described in its pages: the stethoscope (1816), the use of ether foranesthesia (1846), and disinfecting hands and instruments before surgery (1867), among others.

 
 
Timothy Fadek for The New York Times

LIKE, FOLLOW, COLLABORATE A staff meeting at ResearchGate. The networking site, modeled after Silicon Valley startups, houses 350,000 papers.

For centuries, this is how science has operated — through research done in private, then submitted to science and medical journals to be reviewed by peers and published for the benefit of other researchers and the public at large. But to many scientists, the longevity of that process is nothing to celebrate.

The system is hidebound, expensive and elitist, they say. Peer review can take months, journal subscriptions can be prohibitively costly, and a handful of gatekeepers limit the flow of information. It is an ideal system for sharing knowledge, said the quantum physicist Michael Nielsen, only “if you’re stuck with 17th-century technology.”

Dr. Nielsen and other advocates for “open science” say science can accomplish much more, much faster, in an environment of friction-free collaboration over the Internet. And despite a host of obstacles, including the skepticism of many established scientists, their ideas are gaining traction.

Open-access archives and journals like arXiv and the Public Library of Science (PLoS) have sprung up in recent years. GalaxyZoo, a citizen-science site, has classified millions of objects in space, discovering characteristics that have led to a raft of scientific papers.

On the collaborative blog MathOverflow, mathematicians earn reputation points for contributing to solutions; in another math experiment dubbed the Polymath Project, mathematicians commenting on the Fields medalistTimothy Gower’s blog in 2009 found a new proof for a particularly complicated theorem in just six weeks.

And a social networking site called ResearchGate — where scientists can answer one another’s questions, share papers and find collaborators — is rapidly gaining popularity.

Editors of traditional journals say open science sounds good, in theory. In practice, “the scientific community itself is quite conservative,” said Maxine Clarke, executive editor of the commercial journal Nature, who added that the traditional published paper is still viewed as “a unit to award grants or assess jobs and tenure.”

Dr. Nielsen, 38, who left a successful science career to write “Reinventing Discovery: The New Era of Networked Science,” agreed that scientists have been “very inhibited and slow to adopt a lot of online tools.” But he added that open science was coalescing into “a bit of a movement.”

On Thursday, 450 bloggers, journalists, students, scientists, librarians and programmers will converge on North Carolina State University (and thousands more will join in online) for the sixth annual ScienceOnline conference. Science is moving to a collaborative model, said Bora Zivkovic, a chronobiology blogger who is a founder of the conference, “because it works better in the current ecosystem, in the Web-connected world.”

Indeed, he said, scientists who attend the conference should not be seen as competing with one another. “Lindsay Lohan is our competitor,” he continued. “We have to get her off the screen and get science there instead.”

Facebook for Scientists?

“I want to make science more open. I want to change this,” said Ijad Madisch, 31, the Harvard-trained virologist and computer scientist behind ResearchGate, the social networking site for scientists.

Started in 2008 with few features, it was reshaped with feedback from scientists. Its membership has mushroomed to more than 1.3 million, Dr. Madisch said, and it has attracted several million dollars in venture capital from some of the original investors of Twitter, eBay and Facebook.

A year ago, ResearchGate had 12 employees. Now it has 70 and is hiring. The company, based in Berlin, is modeled after Silicon Valley startups. Lunch, drinks and fruit are free, and every employee owns part of the company.

The Web site is a sort of mash-up of Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn, with profile pages, comments, groups, job listings, and “like” and “follow” buttons (but without baby photos, cat videos and thinly veiled self-praise). Only scientists are invited to pose and answer questions — a rule that should not be hard to enforce, with discussion threads about topics like polymerase chain reactions that only a scientist could love.

Scientists populate their ResearchGate profiles with their real names, professional details and publications — data that the site uses to suggest connections with other members. Users can create public or private discussion groups, and share papers and lecture materials. ResearchGate is also developing a “reputation score” to reward members for online contributions.

ResearchGate offers a simple yet effective end run around restrictive journal access with its “self-archiving repository.” Since most journals allow scientists to link to their submitted papers on their own Web sites, Dr. Madisch encourages his users to do so on their ResearchGate profiles. In addition to housing 350,000 papers (and counting), the platform provides a way to search 40 million abstracts and papers from other science databases.

In 2011, ResearchGate reports, 1,620,849 connections were made, 12,342 questions answered and 842,179 publications shared. Greg Phelan, chairman of the chemistry department at the State University of New York, Cortland, used it to find new collaborators, get expert advice and read journal articles not available through his small university. Now he spends up to two hours a day, five days a week, on the site.

Dr. Rajiv Gupta, a radiology instructor who supervised Dr. Madisch at Harvard and was one of ResearchGate’s first investors, called it “a great site for serious research and research collaboration,” adding that he hoped it would never be contaminated “with pop culture and chit-chat.”

Mike Peel

EVOLUTION Michael Nielsen, a quantum physicist, says that as online tools slowly catch on, open science is coalescing into “a bit of a movement.”

 
Travis Dove for The New York Times

COME TOGETHER Bora Zivkovic, a chronobiology blogger, is a founder of  the ScienceOnline conference.

Dr. Gupta called Dr. Madisch the “quintessential networking guy — if there’s a Bill Clinton of the science world, it would be him.”

The Paper Trade

Dr. Sönke H. Bartling, a researcher at the German CancerResearch Center who is editing a book on “Science 2.0,” wrote that for scientists to move away from what is currently “a highly integrated and controlled process,” a new system for assessing the value of research is needed. If open access is to be achieved through blogs, what good is it, he asked, “if one does not get reputation and money from them?”

Changing the status quo — opening data, papers, research ideas and partial solutions to anyone and everyone — is still far more idea than reality. As the established journals argue, they provide a critical service that does not come cheap.

“I would love for it to be free,” said Alan Leshner, executive publisher of the journal Science, but “we have to cover the costs.” Those costs hover around $40 million a year to produce his nonprofit flagship journal, with its more than 25 editors and writers, sales and production staff, and offices in North America, Europe and Asia, not to mention print and distribution expenses. (Like other media organizations, Science has responded to the decline in advertising revenue by enhancing its Web offerings, and most of its growth comes from online subscriptions.)

Similarly, Nature employs a large editorial staff to manage the peer-review process and to select and polish “startling and new” papers for publication, said Dr. Clarke, its editor. And it costs money to screen for plagiarism and spot-check data “to make sure they haven’t been manipulated.”

Peer-reviewed open-access journals, like Nature Communications and PLoS One, charge their authors publication fees — $5,000 and $1,350, respectively — to defray their more modest expenses.

The largest journal publisher, Elsevier, whose products include The Lancet, Cell and the subscription-based online archive ScienceDirect, has drawn considerable criticism from open-access advocates and librarians, who are especially incensed by its support for the Research Works Act, introduced in Congress last month, which seeks to protect publishers’ rights by effectively restricting access to research papers and data.

In an Op-Ed article in The New York Times last week,Michael B. Eisen, a molecular biologist at the University of California, Berkeley, and a founder of the Public Library of Science, wrote that if the bill passes, “taxpayers who already paid for the research would have to pay again to read the results.”

In an e-mail interview, Alicia Wise, director of universal access at Elsevier, wrote that “professional curation and preservation of data is, like professional publishing, neither easy nor inexpensive.” And Tom Reller, a spokesman for Elsevier, commented on Dr. Eisen’s blog, “Government mandates that require private-sector information products to be made freely available undermine the industry’s ability to recoup these investments.”

Mr. Zivkovic, the ScienceOnline co-founder and a blog editor for Scientific American, which is owned by Nature, was somewhat sympathetic to the big journals’ plight. “They have shareholders,” he said. “They have to move the ship slowly.”

Still, he added: “Nature is not digging in. They know it’s happening. They’re preparing for it.”

Science 2.0

Scott Aaronson, a quantum computing theorist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has refused to conduct peer review for or submit papers to commercial journals. “I got tired of giving free labor,” he said, to “these very rich for-profit companies.”

Dr. Aaronson is also an active member of online science communities like MathOverflow, where he has earned enough reputation points to edit others’ posts. “We’re not talking about new technologies that have to be invented,” he said. “Things are moving in that direction. Journals seem noticeably less important than 10 years ago.”

Dr. Leshner, the publisher of Science, agrees that things are moving. “Will the model of science magazines be the same 10 years from now? I highly doubt it,” he said. “I believe in evolution.

“When a better system comes into being that has quality and trustability, it will happen. That’s how science progresses, by doing scientific experiments. We should be doing that with scientific publishing as well.”

Matt Cohler, the former vice president of product management at Facebook who now represents Benchmark Capital on ResearchGate’s board, sees a vast untapped market in online science.

“It’s one of the last areas on the Internet where there really isn’t anything yet that addresses core needs for this group of people,” he said, adding that “trillions” are spent each year on global scientific research. Investors are betting that a successful site catering to scientists could shave at least a sliver off that enormous pie.

Dr. Madisch, of ResearchGate, acknowledged that he might never reach many of the established scientists for whom social networking can seem like a foreign language or a waste of time. But wait, he said, until younger scientists weaned on social media and open-source collaboration start running their own labs.

“If you said years ago, ‘One day you will be on Facebook sharing all your photos and personal information with people,’ they wouldn’t believe you,” he said. “We’re just at the beginning. The change is coming.”

 SOURCE:
 

Views of Célya Gruson-Daniel, October 29, 2012, MyScienceWork

 
Monday, October 29, 2012 Célya Gruson-Daniel
The Internet now makes it possible to publish and share billions of data items every day, accessible to over 2 billion people worldwide.  This mass of information makes it difficult, when searching, to extract the relevant and useful information from the background noise. It should be added that these searches are time-consuming and can take much longer than the time we actually have to spend on them. Today, Google and specialized search engines such as Google Scholar are based on established algorithms. But are these algorithms sufficiently in line with users’ needs? What if the web needed a human brain to select and put forward the relevant information and not just the information based on “popularity” and lexical and semantic operations?

This article is a translation of “Science et curation : nouvelle pratique du Web 2.0” available at:http://blog.mysciencework.com/2012/02/03/science-et-curation-nouvelle-pratique-du-web-2-0.html It was translated from French into English by Mayte Perea López.

Curation on the World Wide Web ©Beboy-Fotolia

Web 2.0: New practices, new uses

To address this need, human intermediaries, empowered by the participatory wave of web 2.0, naturally started narrowing down the information and providing an angle of analysis and some context. They are bloggers, regular Internet users or community managers – a new type of profession dedicated to the web 2.0. A new use of the web has emerged, through which the information, once produced, is collectively spread and filtered by Internet users who create hierarchies of information. This “popularization of the web”therefore paves the way to a user-centered Internet that plays a more active role in finding means to improve the dissemination of information and filter it with more relevance. Today, this new practice has also been categorized and is known as curation.

The term “curation” was borrowed from the world of fine arts. Curators are responsible for the exhibitions held in museums and galleries. They build these exhibitions and act as intermediaries between the public and works of art. In contemporary art, the curator’s role is also to interpret works of art and discover new artists and trends of the moment. In a similar way on the web, the tasks performed by content curators include the search, selection, analysis, editorial work and dissemination of information. Curators can also share online the most relevant information on a specific subject. Instead of acting as mere echo chambers, they provide some context for their searches. For example, they address niche topics and themes that do not stand out in a traditional search. They prioritize the information and are able to find new means of presenting it, new types of visualizationTheir role is, therefore, to find new formats, faster and more direct means of consultation for Internet users, in a context in which the time we spend reading the information is more and more limited. Curation on the web has a social and relational dimension that plays a central role in the curator’s work. Anyone can act as a curator and personalize information, providing an angle that he or she invites us to discover. This means that curation can be carried out by individuals who do not have an institutional footing. The expression “powered by people” exemplifies this possibility of democratizing information searches.

The world of scientific research and culture is no exception to this movement. The web 2.0 offers the scientific community and its surrounding spheres the opportunity to discover new tools that transform practices and uses, not only of researchers, but also of all the actors of scientific and technical culture (STC).

 
©Zothen-Fotolia

Curation: an Essential Practice to Manage “Open Science”

The web 2.0 gave birth to new practices motivated by the will to have broader and faster cooperation in a more free and transparent environment. We have entered the era of an “open” movement: “open data”, “open software”, etc. In science, expressions like “open access” (to scientific publications and research results) and “open science” are used more and more often.

The concept of “open science” emerged from the web and created bigger and bigger niches all around the planet. Open science and its derivatives such as open access make us dream of an era of open, collective expertise and innovation on an international scale. This catalyst in the field of science is only possible on one condition: that it be accompanied by the emergence of a reflection on the new practices and uses that are essential to its conservation and progress. Sharing information and data at the international level is very demanding in terms of management and organization. As a result, curation has established itself in the realm of science and technology, both in the research community and in the world of scientific and technical culture.

Curation: Collaborative Bibliographic Management for the Researcher 2.0

In the world of research, curation appears as a logical extension of the literature review and bibliographic search, the pillars of a researcher’s work. Curation on the web has brought a new dimension to this work of organizing and prioritizing information. It makes it easier for researchers to collaborate and share, while also bringing to light some works that had previously remained in the shadows.

Mendeley and Zotero are both search and bibliographic management tools that assist you in the creation of an online library. Thus, it is possible to navigate in this mass of bibliographic data, referenced by the researcher, through multiple gateways: keywords, authors’ names, date of publication, etc. In addition, these programs make it possible to generate automatically article bibliographies in the formats specified by each scientific journal. What is new about these tools, apart from the “logistical” aid they provide, is that they are based on collaboration and sharing. Mendeley and Zotero let you create private or public groups. These groups make it possible to share a bibliography with other researchers. They also give access to discussion forums that are useful for sharing with international researchers. Other tools like EndNote and Papersexist, but these paid softwares are less collaborative.

New platforms, real scientific social networks, have also appeared. The leading platform ResearchGate was founded in 2008 and now counts 1.9 million users (august 2012). It is an online search platform, but it is used above all for social interaction. Researchers can create a profile and discussion groups, make their work available online, job hunt, etc. Other professional social networks for researchers have emerged, among them MyScienceWork, which is devoted to open access.

Curation, in the era of open science, accelerates the dissemination of information and provides access to the most relevant parts. Post-publication comments add value to the content. Apart from the benefits for the community, these new practices change the role of researchers in society by offering them new public spaces for expression. Curation on the web opens the way towards the development of an e-reputation and a new form of celebrity in the world of international science. It gives everyone the opportunity to show the cornerstones of their work in the same way that the research notebooks of Hypothèses.orgwere used in Humanities and Social Sciences. This system based on the dual role of “observer/observed” may also impose limits on researchers who would have to be more thorough in the choice of the articles they list.

Have we entered the era of the “researcher 2.0”? Undoubtedly, even if it is still limited to a small group of people. The tools described above are widely used for bibliographic management but their collaborative function is still less used. It is difficult to change researchers’ practices and attitudes. To move from a closed science to an open science in a world of cutthroat competition, researchers will have to grope their way along. These new means of sharing are still sometimes perceived as a threat to the work of researchers or as an excessively long and tedious activity.

Curation and Scientific and Technical Culture: Creating Hybrid Networks

Another area, where there are most likely fewer barriers, is scientific and technical culture. This broad term involves different actors such as associations, companies, universities’ communication departments, CCSTI (French centers for scientific, technical and industrial culture), journalists, etc. A number of these actors do not limit their work to popularizing the scientific data; they also consider they have an authentic mission of “culturing” science. The curation practice thus offers a better organization and visibility to the information. The sought-after benefits will be different from one actor to the next. University communication departments are using the web 2.0 more and more to promote their values; this is the case, for example, for the FrenchUniversité Paris 8. For companies, curation offers the opportunity to become a reference on the themes related to their corporate identity. MyScienceWork, for example, began curating three collections surrounding the key themes of its project. The key topics of its identity are essentially open accessnew uses and practices of the web 2.0 in the world of science and “women in science”. It is essential to keep abreast of the latest news coming from large institutions and traditional media, but also to take into account bloggers’ articles and links that offer a different viewpoint.

Some tools have also been developed in order to meet the expectations of these various users. Pearltreesand Scoopit are non-specialized curation tools that are widely used by the world of Scientific and Technical Culture. Pearltrees offers a visual representation in which each listed page is presented as a pearl connected to the others through branches. The result: a prioritized data tree. These mindmaps can be shared with one’s contacts. A good example of this is the work done by Sébastien Freudenthal, who uses this tool on a daily basis and offers rich content listed by theme in the field of Sciences and Web. Scoopit offers a more traditional presentation with a nice page layout that looks like a magazine. It enables you to list articles quickly and almost automatically, thanks to a plugin, and also to share them. A special tool for the “world” of Technical and Scientific Culture is the social network of scientific culture Knowtex that, in addition to its referencing and links assessment functions, seeks to create a space interconnecting journalists, artists, communicators, designers, bloggers, researchers, etc.

These different tools are used on a daily basis by various actors of technical and scientific culture, but also by researchers, teachers, etc. They gather these communities around a shared practice and favor multiple conversations. The development of these hybrid networks is surely a cornerstone in the building of open science, encouraging the creation of new ties between science and society that go beyond the traditional geographical limits.

Un grand merci à Antoine Blanchard pour sa participation et relecture de l’article.

Find out more:

« Curation is the new research, »… et le nouveau média, Benoit Raphael, 2011http://benoitraphael.com/2011/01/17/curation-is-the-new-search/

La curation : la révolution du webjournalisme?, non-fiction.fr http://www.nonfiction.fr/article-4158-la_curation__la_revolution_du_webjournalisme_.htm

La curation : les 10 raisons de s’y intéresser, Pierre Tran http://pro.01net.com/editorial/529947/la-curation-les-10-raisons-de-sy-interesser/

Curation : quelle valeur pour les entreprises, les médias, et sa « marque personnelle »?, Marie-Laure Vie http://marilor.posterous.com/curation-et-marketing-de-linformation

Cracking Open the Scientific Process, Thomas Lin, New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/17/science/open-science-challenges-journal-tradition-with-web-collaboration.html?_r=4&pagewanted=1

La « massification » du web transforme les relations sociales, Valérie Varandat, INRIA http://www.inria.fr/actualite/actualites-inria/internet-du-futur

Internet a révolutionné le métier de chercheur, AgoraVoxhttp://www.agoravox.fr/actualites/technologies/article/internet-a-revolutionne-le-metier-103514

Gérer ses références numériques, Université de Genèvehttp://www.unige.ch/medecine/udrem/Unit/actualites/biblioManager.html

Notre liste Scoop-it : Scientific Social Network, MyScienceWork

SOURCE:

In French:
 

Summary

This article has two parts, the first presents a pioneering experience in Curation of Scientific Research in an Open Access Online Scientific Journal,  in a BioMed e-Books Series and in curation of a Scoop.it! Journal on Medical Imaging.

The second Part, presents Views of two Curators on the transformation of Scientific Publishing and the functioning of the Scientific AGORA (market place in the Ancient Greek CIty of Athena).

The CHANGES described above are irrevocable and foster progress of civilization by provision of ACCESS to the Scientific Process and Resources via collaboration among peers.

Part Three

SOURCE:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/08/health/for-scientists-an-exploding-world-of-pseudo-academia.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0&emc=eta1 

 

Scientific Articles Accepted (Personal Checks, Too)

Kevin Moloney for The New York Times

Jeffrey Beall, a research librarian at the University of Colorado at Denver, has developed a blacklist of “predatory” journals.

By 

Published: April 7, 2013

The scientists who were recruited to appear at a conference called Entomology-2013 thought they had been selected to make a presentation to the leading professional association of scientists who study insects.

But they found out the hard way that they were wrong. The prestigious, academically sanctioned conference they had in mind has a slightly different name: Entomology 2013 (without the hyphen). The one they had signed up for featured speakers who were recruited by e-mail, not vetted by leading academics. Those who agreed to appear were later charged a hefty fee for the privilege, and pretty much anyone who paid got a spot on the podium that could be used to pad a résumé.

“I think we were duped,” one of the scientists wrote in an e-mail to the Entomological Society.

Those scientists had stumbled into a parallel world of pseudo-academia, complete with prestigiously titled conferences and journals that sponsor them. Many of the journals and meetings have names that are nearly identical to those of established, well-known publications and events.

Steven Goodman, a dean and professor of medicine at Stanford and the editor of the journal Clinical Trials, which has its own imitators, called this phenomenon “the dark side of open access,” the movement to make scholarly publications freely available.

The number of these journals and conferences has exploded in recent years as scientific publishing has shifted from a traditional business model for professional societies and organizations built almost entirely on subscription revenues to open access, which relies on authors or their backers to pay for the publication of papers online, where anyone can read them.

Open access got its start about a decade ago and quickly won widespread acclaim with the advent of well-regarded, peer-reviewed journals like those published by the Public Library of Science, known as PLoS. Such articles were listed in databases like PubMed, which is maintained by the National Library of Medicine, and selected for their quality.

But some researchers are now raising the alarm about what they see as the proliferation of online journals that will print seemingly anything for a fee. They warn that nonexperts doing online research will have trouble distinguishing credible research from junk. “Most people don’t know the journal universe,” Dr. Goodman said. “They will not know from a journal’s title if it is for real or not.”

Researchers also say that universities are facing new challenges in assessing the résumés of academics. Are the publications they list in highly competitive journals or ones masquerading as such? And some academics themselves say they have found it difficult to disentangle themselves from these journals once they mistakenly agree to serve on their editorial boards.

The phenomenon has caught the attention of Nature, one of the most competitive and well-regarded scientific journals. In a news report published recently, the journal noted “the rise of questionable operators” and explored whether it was better to blacklist them or to create a “white list” of those open-access journals that meet certain standards. Nature included a checklist on “how to perform due diligence before submitting to a journal or a publisher.”

Jeffrey Beall, a research librarian at the University of Colorado in Denver, has developed his own blacklist of what he calls “predatory open-access journals.” There were 20 publishers on his list in 2010, and now there are more than 300. He estimates that there are as many as 4,000 predatory journals today, at least 25 percent of the total number of open-access journals.

“It’s almost like the word is out,” he said. “This is easy money, very little work, a low barrier start-up.”

Journals on what has become known as “Beall’s list” generally do not post the fees they charge on their Web sites and may not even inform authors of them until after an article is submitted. They barrage academics with e-mail invitations to submit articles and to be on editorial boards.

One publisher on Beall’s list, Avens Publishing Group, even sweetened the pot for those who agreed to be on the editorial board of The Journal of Clinical Trails & Patenting, offering 20 percent of its revenues to each editor.

One of the most prolific publishers on Beall’s list, Srinubabu Gedela, the director of the Omics Group, has about 250 journals and charges authors as much as $2,700 per paper. Dr. Gedela, who lists a Ph.D. from Andhra University in India, says on his Web site that he “learnt to devise wonders in biotechnology.”

Another Beall’s list publisher, Dove Press, says on its Web site, “There are no limits on the number or size of the papers we can publish.”

Open-access publishers say that the papers they publish are reviewed and that their businesses are legitimate and ethical.

“There is no compromise on quality review policy,” Dr.Gedela wrote in an e-mail. “Our team’s hard work and dedicated services to the scientific community will answer all the baseless and defamatory comments that have been made aboutOmics.”

But some academics say many of these journals’ methods are little different from spam e-mails offering business deals that are too good to be true.

Paulino Martínez, a doctor in Celaya, Mexico, said he was gullible enough to send two articles in response to an e-mail invitation he received last year from The Journal of Clinical Case Reports. They were accepted. Then came a bill saying he owed $2,900. He was shocked, having had no idea there was a fee for publishing. He asked to withdraw the papers, but they were published anyway.

“I am a doctor in a hospital in the province of Mexico, and I don’t have the amount they requested,” Dr. Martínez said. The journal offered to reduce his bill to $2,600. Finally, after a year and many e-mails and a phone call, the journal forgave the money it claimed he owed.

Some professors listed on the Web sites of journals on Beall’s list, and the associated conferences, say they made a big mistake getting involved with the journals and cannot seem to escape them.

Thomas Price, an associate professor of reproductive endocrinology and fertility at the Duke University School of Medicine, agreed to be on the editorial board of The Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics because he saw the name of a well-respected academic expert on its Web site and wanted to support open-access journals. He was surprised, though, when the journal repeatedly asked him to recruit authors and submit his own papers. Mainstream journals do not do this because researchers ordinarily want to publish their papers in the best journal that will accept them. Dr. Price, appalled by the request, refused and asked repeatedly over three years to be removed from the journal’s editorial board. But his name was still there.

“They just don’t pay any attention,” Dr. Price said.

About two years ago, James White, a plant pathologist at Rutgers, accepted an invitation to serve on the editorial board of a new journal, Plant Pathology & Microbiology, not realizing the nature of the journal. Meanwhile, his name, photograph and résumé were on the journal’s Web site. Then he learned that he was listed as an organizer and speaker on a Web site advertising Entomology-2013.

“I am not even an entomologist,” he said.

He thinks the publisher of the plant journal, which also sponsored the entomology conference, — just pasted his name, photograph and résumé onto the conference Web site. At this point, he said, outraged that the conference and journal were “using a person’s credentials to rip off other unaware scientists,” Dr. White asked that his name be removed from the journal and the conference.

Weeks went by and nothing happened, he said. Last Monday, in response to this reporter’s e-mail to the conference organizers, Jessica Lincy, who said only that she was a conference member, wrote to explain that the conference had “technical problems” removing Dr. White’s name. On Tuesday, his name was gone. But it remained on the Web site of the journal.

Dr. Gedela, the publisher of the journals and sponsor of the conference, said in an e-mail on Thursday that Dr. Price and Dr. White’s names remained on the Web sites “because of communication gap between the EB member and the editorial assistant,” referring to editorial board members. That day, their names were gone from the journals’ Web sites.

“I really should have known better,” Dr. White said of his editorial board membership, adding that he did not fully realize how the publishing world had changed. “It seems like the Wild West now.”

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: April 8, 2013

An earlier version of this article misstated the name of a city in Mexico that is home to a doctor who sent articles to a pseudo-academic journal. It is Celaya, not Ceyala.

SOURCE:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/08/health/for-scientists-an-exploding-world-of-pseudo-academia.html?pagewanted=1&_r=0&emc=eta1 

 
 

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Author: Tilda Barliya PhD

Alzheimer disease (AD) is among the most common brain disorders affecting the elderly population the world over, and is projected to become a major health problem with grave socio-economic implications in the coming decade (1a, 1b). Alzheimer’s disease arises in large part from the body’s inability to clear these naturally occurring proteins. As amyloid beta levels increase, they tend to aggregate and contribute to the brain “plaques” found in Alzheimer’s disease. There are still no effective treatments to prevent, halt, or reverse Alzheimer’s disease, but research advances over the past three decades could change this gloomy picture. Genetic studies demonstrate that the disease has multiple causes (2). Interdisciplinary approaches have been used to reveal the molecular mechanism of the disease including; biochemistry,  molecular and cell biology and transgenic mice models.  Progress in chemistry, radiology, and systems biology is beginning to provide useful biomarkers, and the emergence of personalized medicine is poised to transform pharmaceutical development and clinical trials. However, investigative and drug development efforts should be diversified to fully address the multifactoriality of the disease (2). A nice research review shows  for example, the effects of cancer drugs on AD treatment (3).

Nanotechnology Solutions for Alzheimer

Dr. Amir Nazem and Dr. G. Ali Mansoori described in their paper “Nanotechnology Solutions for Alzheimer’s Disease: Advances in Research Tools, Diagnostic Methods and Therapeutic Agents”
that he development of nanotechnology approaches for early-stage diagnosis of AD is quite promising but acknowledge that scientists are still at the very beginning of the ambitious project of designing effective drugs and methods for the regeneration of the central nervous system (4). Figure 1- Nanotechnology solutions of AD.

Applications of nanotechnology in AD therapy including:

  • Nanodiagnostics including imaging
  • Targeted drug delivery and controlled release
  • Regenerative medicine

These inclued: neuroprotections against oxidative stress anti-amyloid therapeutics, neuroregeneration and drug delivery beyond the blood brain barrier (BBB) are discussed and analyzed.

All of these applications could improve the treatment approach of AD and other neurodegenerative diseases.

Nanotechnology and Diagnostics:

The diagnosis of AD during life remains difficult and a definite diagnosis of AD relies on histopathological confirmation at post-mortem or by cerebral biopsy.  An early clinical diagnosis can be made if patients  are tested by trained neuropsychologists. The great problem is not that mild cognitive impairment  (MCI) cannot be diagnosed, but that the patients do not see doctor until severely affected (5).

During the last decade, research efforts have focused on developing  cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers for AD. The diagnostic performance of the CSF  biomarkers: Tau protein, the 42-amino acid form of beta amyloid (Aβ42) and Amyloid  Precursor Protein are of great importance. One possible biomarker for Alzheimer’s is  amyloid beta-derived diffusible ligands (ADDL). The correlation of CSF ADDL levels  with disease state offers promise for improved AD diagnosis and early treatment. Singh et al have developed ADDL-specific monoclonal antibodies with an ultrasensitive,  nanoparticle-based protein detection strategy termed biobarcode amplification (BCA) (5).

The BCA strategy used by Klein, Mirkin and coworkers makes clever use of nanoparticles as DNA carriers to enable millionfold improvements over ELISA sensitivity. CSF is first exposed to monoclonal anti-ADDL antibodies bound to magnetic microparticles. After ADDL binding, the microparticles are separated with a magnetic field and washed before addition of secondary antibodies bound to DNA:Au nanoparticle conjugates. These conjugates conatin covalently bound DNA as well as complementary “barcode” DNA that is attached via hybridization. Unreacted antibody:DNA:Au nanoparticle conjugates are removed during second magnetic separation, after which elevated temperature and low-salt conditions release the barcode DNA for analysis.

“Such a sensor must be able to transmit any biomarker detection event to an external device that records the transmitted signals and reports an estimated amount for the concentration of AD biomarkers in the CSF. Of course, in order to send such biosensor to a place exposing with CSF, it is necessary to design noninvasive approaches.” (4)

Nanotechnology and treatment:

Presently there exist no therapeutic methods available for curing AD [84]. The cure for AD would require therapeutics that will cease the disease progress and will reverse its resultant damages. Today, common medications for AD are symptomatic and aim at the disrupted neurotransmission between the degenerated neurons. Examples of such medications are acetylcholine esterase inhibitors, including tacrine, donepezil, rivastigmine and galantamine (4).

Design of each mechanistic therapeutic is for targeting a different stage of the AD pathogenetic process and therefore help to cease the progress of the disease. Currently there are 5 mechanistic therapeutic molecular approaches:

  • Inhibition of Aβ production;
  • Inhibition of Aβ oligomerization,
  • Anti-inflammation,
  • Cholesterol homeostasis modulating;
  • Metal chelation

The nanotechnology approaches are:

  • Drug discovery and monitoring
  • Controlled release
  • Targeted drug delivery

For example: Neuroprotection

Oxidative stress and amyloid induced toxicity are two basic toxicity processes in AD pathogenesis.

Oxidative stress protection:

Fullerene is a nanotechnology building block and can be used to design neuroprotective compounds. It’s chemical structure is known for it’s anti-oxidative and free-scavenger potentials. Applications of functionalized fullerene derivatives including carboxyfullerene and hydroxyfullerene (fullerenols), are promising in discovery of new drugs for AD; however further research on their pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties is necessary.

Anti-amyloid protections:

Nanotechnology has recently offered some antiamyloid neuroprotective approaches against the cellular and synaptic toxicity of oligomeric and fibrillar (polymeric) Aβ species. The current ongoing nanotechnology research categories on anti-amyloid neuroprotective approaches are the following three:

  1. Prevention from assembly of Aβ monomers
  2. Breaking and resolubilization of the oligomeric or fibrillar (polymeric) Aβ species
  3. Prevention from toxic effects of Aβ

Summary:

AD is a very common disease worldwide,  Solving the major problems of early diagnosis and effective cure for AD requires interdisciplinary research efforts. Research on the basic pathogenetic mechanisms of the disease has provided new insight for designing diagnostic and therapeutic methods. Nanotechnology has great potential in aiding and providing tools for diagnosing and treating AD. However, these research combining nanotechnology is still at very early stages and continuous understanding of the disease, neuronal protection and regeneration are needed in order to alleviate the symptoms of the disease.

Ref.
1a. D. G. Georganopoulou et al., “Nanoparticle-based Detection in Cerebral Spinal Fluid of a Soluble Pathogenic Biomarker for Alzheimer’s Disease”, Proc. Natl Acad Sci., 102 (2005) 2273-2276

1b D.A. Davis, W. Klein and L. Chang, “Nanotechnology-based Approaches to Alzheimer’s Clinical Diagnostics”, Nanoscape, 3 (2006) 13-17.
Read more: http://www.nanowerk.com/spotlight/spotid=23726.php#ixzz2NWlx6jYa

2. Huang Y and Mucke L. Alzheimer mechanisms and therapeutic strategies. Cell. 2012 Mar 16;148(6):1204-22.

http://www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674(12)00278-4

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22424230

3. Cancer Drug Shows Promise in Alzheimer’s Treatment: Helps clear plaque and improve brain function in mice. Alzheimer’s Disease Research is a program of the American Health Assistance Foundation. http://www.nanowerk.com/spotlight/spotid=5262.php

4. Amir Nazem1, G. Ali Mansoori. Nanotechnology solutions for Alzheimer’s disease: advances in research tools, diagnostic methods and therapeutic agents. J Alzheimers Dis. 2008 Mar;13(2):199-223.  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18376062?dopt=Abstract.

Full text: http://www.uic.edu/labs/trl/1.OnlineMaterials/08-Nanotechnology_Solutions_for_Alzheimer’s_Disease.pdf

5. Shinjini Singh, Mritunjai Singh, I. S. Gambhir*. Nanotechnology for Alzheimer’s Disease Detection. Digest Journal of Nanomaterials and Biostructures Vol. 3, No.2, June 2008, p. 75 – 79 .

http://www.chalcogen.infim.ro/Singh-Gambhir.pdf

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Alzheimer’s Genomic Diagnosis and Treatment

Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

 

Gene Mutation Protects Against Alzheimer’s

by Greg Miller on 11 July 2012
Brain preserver. A newly discovered gene mutation appears to protect against Alzheimer’s disease. Credit: Alzheimer’s Disease Education and Referral Center/NIA/NIH
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2012/07/gene-mutation-protects-against-a.html

A rare mutation that alters a single letter of the genetic code protects people from the

  • memory-robbing dementia of Alzheimer’s disease.

The DNA change may inhibit the buildup of β amyloid, the

  • protein fragment that forms the hallmark plaques in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.
  • The mutation affects a gene called APP,
  • which encodes a protein that gets broken down into pieces,
  • including β amyloid.

Researchers previously identified more than 30 mutations to APP, none of them good. Several of these changes increase β amyloid formation and cause

•      a devastating inherited form of Alzheimer’s that afflicts people in their 30s and 40s—

•      much earlier than the far more common “late-onset” form of Alzheimer’s

  • that typically strikes people their 70s and 80s.

The new mutation, discovered from whole-genome data from 1795 Icelanders for variations in APP that protect against Alzheimer’s, appears to do the opposite. The mutation interferes with one of the enzymes that breaks down the APP protein and causes a 40% reduction in β amyloid formation

New pharmacological strategies for treatment of Alzheimer’s disease: focus on disease modifying drugs.
Salomone S, Caraci F, Leggio GM, Fedotova J, Drago F.
University of Catania, Viale Andrea Doria 6, Catania, Italy.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2012 Apr;73(4):504-17. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2125.2011.04134.x.

Current approved drug treatments for Alzheimer disease (AD) include

These drugs provide symptomatic relief but poorly affect the progression of the disease. Drug discovery has been directed, in the last 10 years, to develop ‘disease modifying drugs’ hopefully able to counteract the progression of AD. Because in a chronic, slow progressing pathological process, such as AD, an early start of treatment enhances the chance of success,

  • it is crucial to have biomarkers for early detection of AD-related brain dysfunction,
    • usable before clinical onset.

Reliable early biomarkers need therefore to be prospectively tested for predictive accuracy,

  • with specific cut off values validated in clinical practice.

Disease modifying drugs developed so far include drugs to

  • reduce β amyloid () production,
  • drugs to prevent Aβ aggregation,
  • drugs to promote Aβ clearance,
  • drugs targeting tau phosphorylation and assembly

None of these drugs has demonstrated efficacy in phase 3 studies. The failure of clinical trials with disease modifying drugs raises a number of questions, spanning from

  • methodological flaws to
  • fundamental understanding of AD pathophysiology and biology.

Diagnostic criteria applicable to presymptomatic stages of AD have now been published.

These new criteria may impact on drug development, such that future trials on disease modifying drugs will include populations susceptible to AD, before clinical onset. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22035455

Gene mutation defends against Alzheimer’s disease
Rare genetic variant suggests a cause and treatment for cognitive decline.
Ewen Callaway  11 July 2012
http://www.nature.com/news/gene-mutation-defends-against-alzheimer-s-disease-1.10984

J. NIETH/CORBIS
Almost 30 million people live with Alzheimer’s disease worldwide, a staggering health-care burden that is expected to quadruple by 2050. Yet doctors can offer no effective treatment, and scientists have been unable to pin down the underlying mechanism of the disease.
Research published this week offers some hope on both counts – few people carry a genetic mutation that naturally prevents them from developing the condition – 0.5% of Icelanders have a protective gene, as are 0.2–0.5% of Finns, Swedes and Norwegians. Icelanders who carry it have a 50% better chance of reaching age 85, are more than five times more likely to reach it 85 without Alzheimer’s.   The mutation seems to put a brake on the milder mental deterioration that most elderly people experience. Carriers are about 7.5 times more likely than non-carriers to reach the age of 85 without major cognitive decline, and perform better on the cognitive tests that are administered thrice yearly to Icelanders who live in nursing homes.
The discovery not only confirms the principal suspect that is responsible for Alzheimer’s, it also suggests that the disease could be

  • an extreme form of the cognitive decline seen in many older people.

The mutation — the first ever found to protect against the disease — lies in a gene that produces

  • amyloid-β precursor protein (APP),
  • which has an unknown role in the brain

APP was discovered 25 years ago in patients with rare,

  • inherited forms of Alzheimer’s that strike in middle age.
  • In the brain, APP is broken down into a smaller molecule called amyloid-β.

Visible clumps, or plaques, of amyloid-β found in the autopsied brains of patients are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s.
Scientists have long debated whether the plaques are a cause of the neuro­degenerative condition

  • or a consequence of other biochemical changes associated with the disease.

The latest finding supports other genetics studies blaming amyloid-β, according to Rudolph Tanzi, a neurologist at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and a member of one of the four teams that discovered APP’s role in the 1980s.
If amyloid-β plaques were confirmed as the cause of Alzheimer’s, it would bolster efforts to develop drugs that block their formation, says Kári Stefánsson, chief executive of deCODE Genetics in Reykjavik, Iceland, who led the latest research. He and his team first discovered the mutation by comparing the complete genome sequences of 1,795 Icelanders with their medical histories. The researchers then studied the variant in nearly 400,000 more Scandinavians.
This suggests that Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline are two sides of the same coin, with a common cause — the build-up of amyloid-β plaques in the brain, something seen to a lesser degree in elderly people who do not develop full-blown Alzheimer’s. A drug that mimics the effects of the mutation, might slow cognitive decline as well as prevent Alzheimer’s.
Stefánsson and his team discovered that the mutation introduces a single amino-acid alteration to APP. This amino acid is close to the site where an enzyme called

  • β-secretase 1 (BACE1) ordinarily snips APP into smaller amyloid-β chunks —
  • and the alteration is enough to reduce the enzyme’s efficiency.

Stefánsson’s study suggests that blocking β-secretase from cleaving APP has the potential to prevent Alzheimer’s, but Philippe Amouyel, an epidemiologist at the Pasteur Institute in Lille, France, says “it is very difficult to identify the

  • precise time when this amyloid toxic effect could still be modified”.

“If this effect needs to be blocked as early as possible in life to protect against Alzheimer’s disease, we will need to propose a new design for clinical trials” to identify an effective treatment.

The results demonstrate that whole-genome sequencing can uncover very rare mutations that might offer insight into common diseases.

  • disease risk, may be determined by genetic variants that slightly tilt the odds of developing disease
  • In this case a rare mutant may provide very key mechanistic insights into Alzheimer’s

Jonsson, T. et al. Nature     http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11283 (2012).
Kang, J. et al. Nature 325, 733–736 (1987).
Goldgaber, D., Lerman, M. I., McBride, O. W., Saffiotti, U. & Gajdusek, D. C. Science 235, 877–880 (1987).

BHCE genetic data combined with brain imaging using agent florbetapir connects the BHCE gene to AD plaque buildup. BHCE is an enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine in the brain, which is depleted early in the disease and results in memory loss.   http://www.genengnews.com/

New Alzheimer’s Genes Found
Gigantic Scientific Effort Discovers Clues to Treatment, Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease
By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Health News Reviewed by Laura J. Martin, MD
http://www.webmd.com/alzheimers/news/20110403/new-alzheimers-genes-found

A massive scientific effort has found five new gene variants linked to Alzheimer’s disease. The undertaking involved analyzing the genomes of nearly 40,000 people with and without Alzheimer’s. This study was undertaken by two separate research consortiums in the U.S. and in Europe, which collaborated to confirm each other’s results.
Four genes had previously been linked to Alzheimer’s. Three of them affect only the risk of relatively rare forms of Alzheimer’s. The fourth is APOE, until now the only gene known to affect risk of the common, late-onset form of Alzheimer’s. Roughly 27% of Alzheimer’s disease can be attributed to the five new gene variants.  Even though Alzheimer’s is a very complex disease, the new findings represent a large chunk of Alzheimer’s risk, according to Margaret A. Pericak-Vance, PhD, of the U.S. consortium –

  • 20% of the causal risk of Alzheimer’s disease and
  • 32% of the genetic risk.

Alzheimer’s Tied to Mutation Harming Immune Response
By GINA KOLATA   Published: November 14, 2012  in NY Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/15/health/gene-mutation-that-hobbles-immune-response-is-linked-to-alzheimers.html?_r=0
Alzheimer’s researchers and drug companies have for years concentrated on one hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease: the production of toxic shards of a protein that accumulate in plaques on the brain.
Two groups of researchers working from entirely different starting points have converged on a mutated gene involved in another aspect of Alzheimer’s disease:

  • the immune system’s role in protecting against the disease.

The mutation is suspected of interfering with

  • the brain’s ability to prevent the buildup of plaque.

When the gene is not mutated, white blood cells in the brain spring into action,

  • gobbling up and eliminating the plaque-forming toxic protein, beta amyloid.

As a result, Alzheimer’s can be staved off or averted.  People with the mutated gene have a threefold to fivefold increase in the likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease in old age.

Comparing Differences

Dr. Julie Williams’s, Cardiff, Wales (European team leader) report identified CLU and Picalm. A second study published in Nature Genetics, by Philippe Amouyel from Institut Pasteur de Lille in France, pinpointed CLU and CR1. The greatest inherited risk comes from the APOE gene, discovered in 1993 by a team led by Allen Roses, now director of the Deane Drug Discovery Institute at Duke UMC, in Durham, North Carolina.
The findings “are beginning to give us insight into the biology, but I don’t think you can expect treatments overnight,” Dr. Michael Owen (Cardiff, Wales) said. Instead, the genes will show a mosaic of risk, and “the key issue is what hand of cards you’re dealt,” he said.

Promise for Early Diagnosis
BHCE genetic data combined with brain imaging using agent florbetapir connects the BHCE gene to AD plaque buildup. BHCE is an enzyme that breaks down acetylcholine in the brain, which is depleted early in the disease and results in memory loss.

Dr. Bernstein’s comments:

  1. There has been a long history of failure of drugs to slow down the progression of Alzheimer’s.  Regression of the plaques has not corresponded with retention of cognitive ability, which has been behind the arguments over beta amyloid or tau.
  2. We now have two particularly interesting mutations –
    1. ApoE gene mutation that increases risk
    2. APP mutation that quite dramatically affects retention of cognition

β-amyloid fibrils.

β-amyloid fibrils. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: PET scan of a human brain with Alzhei...

English: PET scan of a human brain with Alzheimer’s disease (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Depiction of amyloid precursor protein process...

Depiction of amyloid precursor protein processing, created by I. Peltan Ipeltan (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Diagram of how microtubules desintegr...

English: Diagram of how microtubules desintegrate with Alzheimer’s disease Français : La protéine Tau dans un neurone sain et dans un neurone malade Español: Esquema que muestra cómo se desintegran los microtúbulos en la enfermedad de Alzheimer (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Histopathogic image of senile plaques...

English: Histopathogic image of senile plaques seen in the cerebral cortex in a patient with presenile onset of Alzheimer disease. Bowdian stain. The same case as shown in a file “Alzheimer_dementia_(1)_presenile_onset.jpg”. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

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Ustekinumab New Drug Therapy for Cognitive Decline resulting from Neuroinflammatory Cytokine Signaling and Alzheimer’s Disease

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

UPDATED on 4/1/2022

Study NCT02835716
Submitted Date:  September 10, 2016 (v3)

Open or close this module Study Identification
Unique Protocol ID: PCD=OO ALZ
Brief Title: Pre-Clinical (Alzheimers) Diagnosis PCD = Optimum Outcomes OO (PCD=OOALZ)
Official Title: Pre-Clinical Alzheimer’s (ALZ) Diagnosis (PCD) = Optimum Outcomes (OO)
one of our articles used as a reference for this clinical trial entry
see below

Links:

Description: Multidimensional Representation of Concepts as Cognitive Engrams in the Human Brain

Description: Evaluation of Cognitive Impairment

Description: Ustekinumab New Drug Therapy for Cognitive Decline resulting from Neuroinflammatory Cytokine Signaling and Alzheimer’s Disease

Inhibition of IL-12/IL-23 signaling reduces Alzheimer’s disease–like pathology and cognitive decline

  1. These authors contributed equally to this work.

    • Johannes vom Berg &
    • Stefan Prokop

Affiliations

  1. Institute of Experimental Immunology, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.

    • Johannes vom Berg,
    • Florian Mair &
    • Burkhard Becher
  2. Department of Neuropathology, Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.

    • Stefan Prokop,
    • Kelly R Miller,
    • Juliane Obst,
    • Roland E Kälin,
    • Ileana Lopategui-Cabezas,
    • Anja Wegner,
    • Carola G Schipke &
    • Frank L Heppner
  3. Department of Psychiatry, Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Berlin, Germany.

    • Carola G Schipke &
    • Oliver Peters
  4. Cognitive Neurobiology and Berlin Mouse Clinic for Neurology and Psychiatry, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.

    • York Winter
  5. Present address: Institute of Basic and Preclinical Sciences ‘Victoria de Girón’, Medical University of Havana, Havana, Cuba.

    • Ileana Lopategui-Cabezas
  6. These authors jointly directed this work.
    • Burkhard Becher &
    • Frank L Heppner

     

Abstract

The pathology of Alzheimer’s disease has an inflammatory component that is characterized by upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines, particularly in response to amyloid-β (). Using theAPPPS1 Alzheimer’s disease mouse model, we found increased production of the common interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-23 subunit p40 by microglia. Genetic ablation of the IL-12/IL-23 signaling molecules p40, p35 or p19, in which deficiency of p40 or its receptor complex had the strongest effect, resulted in decreased cerebral amyloid load. Although deletion of IL-12/IL-23 signaling from the radiation-resistant glial compartment of the brain was most efficient in mitigating cerebral amyloidosis, peripheral administration of a neutralizing p40-specific antibody likewise resulted in a reduction of cerebral amyloid load in APPPS1 mice. Furthermore, intracerebroventricular delivery of antibodies to p40 significantly reduced the concentration of soluble Aβ species and reversed cognitive deficits in aged APPPS1 mice. The concentration of p40 was also increased in the cerebrospinal fluid of subjects with Alzheimer’s disease, which suggests that inhibition of the IL-12/IL-23 pathway may attenuate Alzheimer’s disease pathology and cognitive deficits.

Nature Medicine 18, 1812–1819 (2012) doi:10.1038/nm.2965, Published online 25 November 2012

Psoriasis Drug Fights Alzheimer’s By Treating It Like An Auto-Immune Disease

 by 

In a study published this week in the journal Nature Medicine, Swedish and German researchers say a medication already widely in use to treat plaque psoriasis was able to slow the accumuation of amyloid plaques in the brains of mice, as well as improve brain functioning in older mice that already had Alzheimer’s disease.

The drug, ustekinumab, works by suppressing the brain’s immune response to the amyloid-beta protein. Its effectiveness lends support to the idea of Alzheimer’s disease as an auto-immune disease similar to type-2 diabetes, spurred at least in part by the bodies response to inflammation.

The study authors urged the U.S. Food & Drug Administration should approve ustekinumab for patients with early Alzheimer’s disease or mild cognitive impairment and said drugs that shut down specific immune responses — like those used in psoriasis, Crohn’s disease and multiple sclerosis — are “the ideal candidate for the initiation of clinical trials” for Alzheimer’s.

That’s very good news, because pharmaceutical companies have been ready to give up on Alzheimer’s drug development after so many of the drugs being tested for the past decade or more have been failures. Most of those drugs worked under different theories of treating Alzheimer’s disease, focusing more on things like busting up existing plaques or treating the external symptoms of Alzheimer’s.

http://www.blisstree.com/2012/11/28/sex-relationships/psoriasis-drug-fights-alzheimers-by-treating-it-like-an-auto-immune-disease/#ixzz2M7ceuApw

Neuroinflammatory Cytokine Signaling and Alzheimer’s Disease

W. Sue T. Griffin, Ph.D.

N Engl J Med 2013; 368:770-771 February 21, 2013, DOI: 10.1056/NEJMcibr1214546

Immune events may influence development and progression of Alzheimer’s disease. In a mouse model, mice depleted of p40, a cytokine subunit, showed reduced cerebral amyloidosis. Administration of anti-p40 antibodies reduced levels of soluble β-amyloid and restored some cognitive function.

Neuroinflammation, expressed as frank microglial activation with excessive expression of immune cytokines, is fast acquiring the status of “principal culprit” in the unresolved connection between an elevated risk for the development of

  • sporadic Alzheimer’s disease and
  • traumatic brain injury,
  • systemic infections,
  • normal aging, and
  • several neurologic disorders.

Neuroinflammation also appears to be a substantial contributor to Alzheimer’s disease in persons with Down’s syndrome (owing to the excess gene dosage that is characteristic of the syndrome) and in persons with genetic mutations that affect the amyloid precursor protein (APP) or presenilin.1 The molecules and pathways that mediate the inflammation associated with Alzheimer’s disease have recently come under scrutiny. An advance in this area has been described by Vom Berg et al.,2 who used a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease to investigate the role of proinflammatory cytokines in disease pathogenesis.

Their results show that damping the expression and signaling of the cytokines interleukin-12 and interleukin-23 in the mouse model is associated with decreases in microglial activation, in the level of soluble β-amyloid (Aβ), and in the overall Aβ plaque burden. These findings are consistent with earlier studies that linked microglial activation with excess expression of interleukin-1 (which regulates interleukin-12–interleukin-23 signaling3) and expression of APP (which when cleaved generates Aβ), the development of Aβ plaques, and the activation of microglia in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease.

Vom Berg et al. also observed that intracerebroventricular delivery of an antibody against p40 — a subunit common to both interleukin-12 and interleukin-23 — reversed the age-related cognitive decline in mice and that this reversal was accompanied by a reduction in levels of soluble Aβ. These observations suggest that the suppression of signaling by interleukin-12, interleukin- 23, or other inflammatory cytokines may prevent or delay the onset of Alzheimer’s disease and, for patients already undergoing the cognitive decline of Alzheimer’s disease, may halt such decline. 

These findings raise the question of whether monoclonal p40 antibodies (ustekinumab and briakinumab), which have already been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of psoriasis, should be tested in randomized, controlled trials for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease. Also of interest is a large epidemiologic study4 in which the rate of incident Alzheimer’s disease decreased by almost 50% among persons who took the common nonsteroidal antiinflammatory agent (NSAID) ibuprofen for 5 years, a finding that suggests that experimental investigation of NSAIDs as preventive agents is warranted.

Given the mounting sociological, economic, and personal costs of Alzheimer’s disease, the lack of a perfect understanding of its mechanisms should not stop researchers from conducting clinical studies of a variety of strategies intended to reduce the risk of development of the disease and of experimental approaches to expedite its treatment.

W. Sue T. Griffin, Ph.D.: Disclosure forms provided by the author are available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org. From the Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics and Institute on Aging, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and the Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center (GRECC) at the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System — both in Little Rock.

1. Griffin WS, Barger SW. Neuroinflammatory cytokines — the common thread in Alzheimer’s pathogenesis. US Neurol 2010; 6(2):19-27.

2. Vom Berg J, Prokop S, Miller KR, et al. Inhibition of IL-12/ IL-23 signaling reduces Alzheimer’s disease-like pathology and cognitive decline. Nat Med 2012;18:1812-9.

3. Oppmann B, Lesley R, Blom B, et al. Novel p19 protein engages IL-12p40 to form a cytokine, IL-23, with biological activities similar as well as distinct from IL-12. Immunity 2000;13: 715-25.

4. Vlad SC, Miller DR, Kowall NW, Felson DT. Protective effects of NSAIDs on the development of Alzheimer disease. Neurology 2008;70:1672-7.

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Genomic Promise for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Dementias, Autism Spectrum, Schizophrenia, and Serious Depression

Reporter and writer: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

There has been an considerable success in the current state of expanding our knowledge in genomics and therapeutic targets in cancer (although clinical remission targets and relapse are a concern), cardiovascular disease, and infectious disease.  Our knowledge of  prenatal and perinatal events is still at an early stage.  The neurology front is by no means unattended.  Here there are two prominent drivers of progress –

  • genomic control of cellular apoptosis by ubiquitin pathways, and
  • epigenetic investigations,

among a complex sea of sequence-changes.  I indicate some of the current status in this.  However, as much as we have know, there is an incredible barrier to formulate working models because:

  1. ligand binding between DNA short-sequences is not predictable over time
  2. binding between proteins and DNA is still largely unknown
  3. specific regulatory roles between nucleotide-sequences and histone proeins are still unclear
  4. the relationship between intracellular as well as extracellular cations and the equilibria between cations and anions in intertitial fluid that bathes the cell and between organelles is virgin territory

Consequently, it is quite an accomplishment to have come as far as we have come, and yet, even with the huge compuational power at our disposal, there is insuficient data to unravel the complexity.  This may be especially true in the pathway to understanding of neurological and behavioral disorders.

Broad Map of Brain

John Markoff reports in the Feb 18 front-page of New York Times (Project would construct a broad map of the brain) that the Obama administration envisions a decade-long effort to examine the workings of the human brain and construct a map, comparable to what the Human Genome Project did for genetics.  It will be a collaboration between universities, the federal government, private foundations, and teams of scientists (neuro-, nano- and whoever else).  The goal is to break through the barrier to understanding the brain’s billions of neurons and gain greater insight into

  • perception
  • actions
  • and consciousness.

Essentially, it holds great promise for understanding

Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s, as well as finding therapies for a variety of mental illnesses.  An open-ended question is whether it will also advance artificial intelligence research.  It is termed the Brain Activity Map project.
http://NYTimes/broad-map-of-brain/

Schizophrenia Genomics

Scientists Reveal Genomic Explanation for Schizophrenia

July 11, 2011 

http://GenWeb.com/Exome Sequences Reveal Role for De Novo Mutations in Schizophrenia/
h
ttp://NatureGenetics.com/Exome Sequences Reveal Role for De Novo Mutations in Schizophrenia/
http://SchizophreniaResearch.com/INFS integrates diverse neurological signals that control the development of embryonic stem cell and neural progenitor cells/

Buffalo, NY (Scicast) (GenomeWeb News) –

Two new studies, published in Schizophrenia Research and in Nature Genetics, propose hypotheses in a new mouse model of schizophrenia that demonstrates how gestational brain changes cause behavioural problems later in life.  

The first study implicates

A fibroblast growth factor receptor protein, (FGFR1), targets diverse genes implicated in schizophrenia.  The research demonstrates how defects in an important neurological pathway in early development

  • may be responsible for the onset of schizophrenia later in life.

Individuals with sporadic schizophrenia tend to carry more deleterious genetic changes than found in the general population, according to an exome sequencing study  that appeared online in Nature Genetics yesterday.  “The occurrence of de novo mutations may in part explain the high worldwide incidence of schizophrenia,”  according to co-senior author Guy Rouleau, CHU Sainte-Justine Research Center of University of Montreal.
Researchers from Canada and France did exome sequencing on individuals from 14 parent-child trios, each comprised of an individual with schizophrenia and his or her unaffected parents. In the process, they found

  • 15 de novo mutations in coding sequences from eight individuals with the psychiatric condition, including
  • four nonsense mutations predicted to abbreviate protein sequences.

“They surmise that [de novo mutations] may account for some of the heritability reported for schizophrenia.  Recent exome sequencing studies involving parent-child trios have implicated de novo mutations in other brain-related conditions, including

  • autism spectrum disorder and
  • mental retardation.

To detect de novo genetic changes specific to schizophrenia, the team compared coding sequences from affected individuals with

  • the human reference genome, with
  • both of his or her parents, and
  • with 26 unrelated control individuals.

Of the 15 de-novo mutations verified by Sager sequencing,

  • 11 were missense mutations predicted to alter the amino acid sequence of the resulting protein and
  • four were nonsense mutations predicted to truncate it.

Among the genes containing nonsense mutations were the zinc finger protein-coding gene ZNF480, the karyopherin alpha 1 gene KPNA1, the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related gene LRP1, and the ALS-like protein-coding gene ALS2CL.

The 15 mutations were found in coding sequences from eight of the individuals with schizophrenia,

  • hinting at a higher de novo mutation rate in individuals with sporadic schizophrenia than is predicted in the population overall.

This difference seems to be specific to exomes, and the researchers noted that

  • de novo mutation rates across the entire genome are likely comparable in those with or without schizophrenia.

They conclude that the enrichment of [de novo mutations] within the coding sequence of individuals with schizophrenia may underlie the pathogenesis of many of these individual.  Most of the genes identified in this study have not been previously linked to schizophrenia, thereby providing new potential therapeutic targets.

The second study

  • identifies the Integrative Nuclear FGFR 1 Signaling (INFS) as a central intersection point for multiple pathways of
  • as many as 160 different genes believed to be involved in the disorder.

The lead author Dr. Michal Stachowiakthis (UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences) suggests this  is the first model that explains schizophrenia

  1. from genes
  2. to development
  3. to brain structure and
  4. finally to behaviour .

A key challenge has been that patients with schizophrenia exhibit mutations in different genes. It is  possible to have 100 patients with schizophrenia and each one has a different genetic mutation that causes the disorder. The explanation is possibly because INFS integrates diverse neurological signals that control the development of embryonic stem cell and neural progenitor cells, and

  • links pathways involving schizophrenia-linked genes.

“INFS functions like the conductor of an orchestra,” explains Stachowiak. “It doesn’t matter which musician is playing the wrong note,

  • it brings down the conductor and the whole orchestra.

With INFS, we propose that

  • when there is an alteration or mutation in a single schizophrenia-linked gene,
  • the INFS system that controls development of the whole brain becomes untuned.

Using embryonic stem cells, Stachowiak and colleagues at UB and other institutions found that

  • some of the genes implicated in schizophrenia bind the FGFR1 (fibroblast growth factor receptor) protein,
  • which in turn, has a cascading effect on the entire INFS.

“We believe that FGFR1 is the conductor that physically interacts with all genes that affect schizophrenia,” he says. “We think that schizophrenia occurs

  • when there is a malfunction in the transition from stem cell to neuron, particularly with dopamine neurons.”

The researchers tested their hypothesis by creating an FGFR1 mutation in mice, which produced the hallmarks of the human disease: altered brain anatomy,

  • behavioural impacts and
  • overloaded sensory processes.

The researchers would like to devise ways to arrest development of the disease before it presents fully in adolescence or adulthood. The UB work adds to existing evidence that nicotinic agonists, might  help improve cognitive function in schizophrenics by acting on the INFS.

childhood-schizophrenia-symptoms

childhood-schizophrenia-symptoms (Photo credit: Life Mental Health)

English: Types of point mutations. With examples.

English: Types of point mutations. With examples. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Parkinson’s Disease

http:// CMEcorner.com/file:///G:/neurodegenerative_disease/Parkinson’s_disease.htm

PINK1 and Parkin and Parkinson’s Disease

Studies of the familial Parkinson disease-related proteins PINK1 and Parkin have demonstrated that these factors promote the fragmentation and turnover of mitochondria following treatment of cultured cells with mitochondrial depolarizing agents. Whether PINK1 or Parkin influence mitochondrial quality control under normal physiological conditions in dopaminergic neurons, a principal cell type that degenerates in Parkinson disease, remains unclear. To address this matter, we developed a method to purify and characterize neural subtypes of interest from the adult Drosophila brain.

Using this method, we find that dopaminergic neurons from Drosophila parkin mutants accumulate enlarged, depolarized mitochondria, and that genetic perturbations that promote mitochondrial fragmentation and turnover rescue the mitochondrial depolarization and neurodegenerative phenotypes of parkin mutants. In contrast, cholinergic neurons from parkin mutants accumulate enlarged depolarized mitochondria to a lesser extent than dopaminergic neurons, suggesting that a higher rate of mitochondrial damage, or a deficiency in alternative mechanisms to repair or eliminate damaged mitochondria explains the selective vulnerability of dopaminergic neurons in Parkinson disease.

Our study validates key tenets of the model that PINK1 and Parkin promote the fragmentation and turnover of depolarized mitochondria in dopaminergic neurons. Moreover, our neural purification method provides a foundation to further explore the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease, and to address other neurobiological questions requiring the analysis of defined neural cell types.

Burmana JL, Yua S, Poole AC, Decala RB , Pallanck L. Analysis of neural subtypes reveals selective mitochondrial dysfunction in dopaminergic neurons from parkin mutants.

http://Burmana JL, Yua S, Poole AC, Decala RB , Pallanck L. Analysis of neural subtypes reveals selective mitochondrial dysfunction in dopaminergic neurons from parkin mutants./

Autophagy in Parkinson’s Disease.

Parkinson’s disease is a common neurodegenerative disease in the elderly. To explore the specific role of autophagy and the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in apoptosis,

  • a specific proteasome inhibitor and macroautophagy inhibitor and stimulator were selected to investigate
  1. pheochromocytoma (PC12) cell lines
  2. transfected with human mutant (A30P) and wildtype (WT) -synuclein.
  • The apoptosis ratio was assessed by flow cytometry.
  • LC3heat shock protein 70 (hsp70) and caspase-3 expression in cell culture were determined by Western blot.
  • The hallmarks of apoptosis and autophagy were assessed with transmission electron microscopy.

Compared to the control group or the rapamycin (autophagy stimulator) group, the apoptosis ratio in A30P and WT cells was significantly higher after treatment with inhibitors of the proteasome and macroautophagy.

  1. The results of Western blots for caspase-3 expression were similar to those of flow cytometry;
  2. hsp70 protein was significantly higher in the proteasome inhibitor group than in control, but
  3. in the autophagy inhibitor and stimulator groups, hsp70 was similar to control.

These findings show that

  1. inhibition of the proteasome and autophagy promotes apoptosis, and
  2. the macroautophagy stimulator rapamycin reduces the apoptosis ratio.
  3. And inhibiting or stimulating autophagy has less impact on hsp70 than the proteasome pathway.

In conclusion,

  • either stimulation or inhibition of macroautophagy, has less impact on hsp70 than on the proteasome pathway.
  • rapamycin decreased apoptotic cells in A30P cells independent of caspase-3 activity.

Although several lines of evidence recently demonstrated crosstalk between autophagy and caspase-independent apoptosis, we could not confirm that

  • autophagy activation protects cells from caspase-independent cell death.

Undoubtedly, there are multiple connections between the apoptotic and autophagic processes. Inhibition of autophagy may

  • subvert the capacity of cells to remove
  • damaged organelles or to remove misfolded proteins, which
  • would favor apoptosis.

However, proteasome inhibition activated macroautophagy and accelerated apoptosis. A likely explanation is inhibition of the proteasome favors oxidative reactions that trigger apoptosis, presumably through

  • a direct effect on mitochondria, and
  • the absence of NADPH2 and ATP which may
  • deinhibit the activation of caspase-2 or MOMP.

Another possibility is that aggregated proteins induced by proteasome inhibition increase apoptosis.

Yang F, Yanga YP, Maoa CJ, Caoa BY, et al. Role of autophagy and proteasome degradation pathways in apoptosis of PC12 cells overexpressing human -synuclein. Neuroscience Letters 2009; 454:203–208. doi:10.1016/j.neulet.2009.03.027. www.elsevier.com/locate/neulet   http://neurosciletters.com/ Role_of_autophagy_and_proteasome_degradation_pathways_in_apoptosis_of_PC12_cells_overexpressing_human –synuclein/

Parkin-dependent Ubiquitination of Endogenous Bax

Autosomal recessive loss-of-function mutations within the PARK2 gene functionally inactivate the E3 ubiquitin ligase parkin, resulting

  • in neurodegeneration of catecholaminergic neurons and a familial form of Parkinson disease.

Current evidence suggests both

  • a mitochondrial function for parkin and
  • a neuroprotective role, which may in fact be interrelated.

The antiapoptotic effects of Parkin have been widely reported, and may involve

fundamental changes in the threshold for apoptotic cytochrome c release, but the substrate(s) involved in Parkin dependent protection had not been identified. This study demonstrates

  • the Parkin-dependent ubiquitination of endogenous Bax
  • comparing primary cultured neurons from WT and Parkin KO mice and
  • using multiple Parkin-overexpressing cell culture systems.

The direct ubiquitination of purified Bax was also observed in vitro following incubation with recombinant parkin.

  1. Parkin prevented basal and apoptotic stress induced translocation of Bax to the mitochondria.
  2. an engineered ubiquitination-resistant form of Bax retained its apoptotic function,
  3. but Bax KO cells complemented with lysine-mutant Bax
  • did not manifest the antiapoptotic effects of Parkin that were observed in cells expressing WT Bax.

The conclusion is that Bax is the primary substrate responsible for the antiapoptotic effects of Parkin, and provides mechanistic insight into at least a subset of the mitochondrial effects of Parkin.

Johnson BN, Berger AK, Cortese GP, and LaVoie MJ. The ubiquitin E3 ligase Parkin regulates the proapoptotic function of Bax. PNAS 2012, pp 6. www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1113248109
http://
PNAS.org/ The_ubiquitin_E3_ligase_Parkin_regulates_the_proapoptotic_function_of_Bax

                                                                                                                           nature10774-f3.2   ubiquitin structures  Rn1  Rn2

Ubiquitin is a small, compact protein characterized by a b-grasp fold.

Parkin Promotes Mitochondrial Loss in Autophagy

Parkin, an E3 ubiquitin ligase implicated in Parkinson’s disease,

  • promotes degradation of dysfunctional mitochondria by autophagy.

upon translocation to mitochondria, Parkin activates the ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS) for

  • widespread degradation of outer membrane proteins.

We observe

  1. an increase in K48-linked polyubiquitin on mitochondria,
  2. recruitment of the 26S proteasome and
  3. rapid degradation of multiple outer membrane proteins.

The degradation of proteins by the UPS occurs independently of the autophagy pathway, and

  • inhibition of the 26S proteasome completely abrogates Parkin-mediated mitophagy in HeLa, SH-SY5Y and mouse cells.

Although the mitofusins Mfn1 and Mfn2 are rapid degradation targets of Parkin, degradation of additional targets is essential for mitophagy.

It appears that remodeling of the mitochondrial outer membrane proteome is important for mitophagy, and reveal

  • a causal link between the UPS and autophagy, the major pathways for degradation of intracellular substrates.

Chan NC, Salazar AM, Pham AH, Sweredoski MJ, et al. Broad activation of the ubiquitin–proteasome system by Parkin is critical for mitophagy. Human Molecular Genetics 2011; 20(9): 1726–1737. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddr048.  http://HumMolecGenetics.com/ Broad_activation_of_the_ubiquitin–proteasome_system_by_Parkin_is_critical_for_mitophagy/

Autophagy impairment: a crossroad

Nassif M and Hetz C.  Autophagy impairment: a crossroad between neurodegeneration and tauopathies.  BMC Biology 2012; 10:78. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/10/78

http://BMC.com/Biology/Autophagy impairment: a crossroad between neurodegeneration and tauopathies/
http://
Molecular Neurodegeneration/Nassif M and Hetz C/

Impairment of protein degradation pathways such as autophagy is emerging as

  • a consistent and transversal pathological phenomenon in neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer´s, Huntington´s, and Parkinson´s disease.

Genetic inactivation of autophagy in mice has demonstrated a key role of the pathway in maintaining protein homeostasis in the brain,

  • triggering massive neuronal loss and
  • the accumulation of abnormal protein inclusions.

This paper in Molecular Neurodegeneration from Abeliovich´s group now suggests a role for

  • phosphorylation of Tau and
  • the activation of glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β)
  • in driving neurodegeneration in autophagy-deficient neurons.

This study illuminatess the factors driving neurofibrillary tangle formation in Alzheimer´s disease and tauopathies.

autophagy & apoptosis          stem cell reprogramming     lysosomes.jpeg   exosomes.jpeg   Epigenetics

images: autophagy, stem cell remodeling, lysosome, exosome, epigenetics,

Alzheimer’s Disease

Alzheimer’s Linked To Rare Gene Mutation That Affects Immune System

Article Date: 15 Nov 2012 –
Two international studies published this week point to a link between Alzheimer’s disease and a rare gene mutation that affects the immune system’s inflammation response. The discovery supports an emerging theory about the role of the immune system in the development of Alzheimer’s disease.  Both studies were published online this week in the New England Journal of Medicine, one led by John Hardy of University College London, and the other led by the Iceland-based global company deCode Genetics.
Alzheimer’s is a form of distressing brain-wasting disease that gradually robs people of their memories and their ability to lead independent lives. Its main characteristic is the build up of
  • protein tangles and
  • plaques inside and between brain cells, which eventually
  • disrupts their ability to communicate with each other.
Both teams conclude that a rare mutation in a gene called TREM2, which helps trigger immune system responses, raises the risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease. One study suggests it raises it three-fold, the other, four-fold.  The UCL-led study included researchers from 44 institutions around the world and data on a total of 25,000 people.
After homing in on the TREM2 gene using new sequencing techniques, they carried out further sequencing that identified a set of
  • rare mutations that occurred more often in 1,092 Alzheimer’s disease patients than in a group of 1,107 healthy controls.
They evaluated the most common mutation, R47H, and confirmed that this variant of TREM2 substantially increases the risk for Alzheimer’s disease.  R47H mutation was present in 1.9 percent of the Alzheimer’s patients and in only 0.37 percent of the controls.  The researchers on the study led by deCode Genetics indicate that this strong effect is on a par with that of the well-established gene variant known as APOE4. Not all people who have  the R47H variant will develop Alzheimer’s and in those who do, other genes and environmental factors will also play a role — but like APOE 4 it does substantially increase risk,” Carrasquillo explains.
The study led by deCode Genetics involved collaborators from Iceland, Holland, Germany and the US, not only found a strong link between the R47H variant and Alzheimer’s disease, but the variant also

  • predicts poorer cognitive function in older people without Alzheimer’s.
 In a statement, lead author Kari Stefánsson, CEO and co-founder of deCODE Genetics says:
The discovery of variant TREM2 is important because
  • it confers high risk for Alzheimer’s and
  • because the gene’s normal biological function has been shown to reduce immune response
 He surmises that the  combined factors make TREM2 an attractive target for drug development.
Using deCode’s genome sequencing and genotyping technology, Stefánsson and colleagues identified
  • approximately 41 million markers, including 191,777 functional variants, from
  • 2,261 Icelandic samples.
They further analyzed these variants against the genomes of
  • 3,550 people with Alzheimer’s disease and
  • a control group of over-85s who did not have a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s.
This led to them finding the TREM2 variant, and to make sure this was not just a feature of Icelandic people,
  • they replicated the findings against other control populations in the United States, Germany, the Netherlands and Norway.
Stefánsson says that the results were enabled by having
  • sophisticated research tools,
  • access to expanded and high quality genomic data sets, and
  • investigators with profound analytic skills,
Researching into genetic causes of disease can, thereby,  be carried out using an approach that combines sequence data and biological knowledge to find new drug targets.

R47H Variant of TREM2 and Immune Response

 Preclinical studies have found that
  • TREM2 is important for clearing away cell debris and amyloid protein, the protein that is associated with the brain plaques
  • that are characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease.
 The gene helps control the
  • inflammation response associated with Alzheimer’s and cognitive decline.
Rosa Rademakers, a co-author in the UCL-led study, runs a lab at the Mayo Clinic in Florida that helped to pinpoint the R47H variant of TREM2.  Other studies also link the immune system to Alzheimer’s disease, but
  • studies are needed to establish that R47H  acts by altering immune function.

EPIGENETICS, HISTONE PROTEINS, AND ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE

12/10/12 · Emily Humphreys
Epigenetic effects were first described by Conrad Waddington in 1942 as phenotypic changes resulting from an organism interacting with its environment.1 Today, epigenetics is
  • heritable effects in gene expression that are
  • not based on the genetic sequence.
One known epigenetic mechanism includes posttranslational modifications of histones that are
  • found in the nuclei of nearly all eukaryotes and
  • function to package DNA into nucleosomes.
Histone proteins can be heavily decorated with posttranslational modifications (PTMs), such as
  • acetyl-,
  • methyl-, and
  • phosphoryl- groups at distinct amino acid residues.
These modifications are mainly
  • located in the N-terminal tails of the histone and
  • protrude from the core nucleosome structure.
Gene regulation, and the downstream epigenetic effects, can also
  • depend on the cis or trans orientation of the PTMs.2
One PTM, acetylation, is an important determinant of cell replication, differentiation, and death.3  Zhang, et al. investigated the acetylation of histone proteins in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology found in postmortem human brain tissue compared to neurological controls. To study histone acetylation,
  • histones were isolated from frozen temporal lobe samples of patients with advanced AD.
Histones were quantified using Selected-reaction-monitoring (SRM)-based targeted proteomics, an LC-MS/MS-based technique demonstrated by the Zhang lab.4  Histones were also analyzed using western blot analysis and LC-MS/MS-TMT (tandem-mass-tagging) quantitative proteomics. The results of these three experimental strategies agreed, further validating the specificity and sensitivity of the targeted proteomics methods. Histone acetylation was  reduced throughout in the AD temporal lobe compared to matched controls.
  • the histone H3 K18/K23 acetylation was significantly reduced.
Alzheimer’s disease and aging have also been associated with loss of histone acetylation in mouse model studies.5 In addition, Francis et al. found
  • cognitively impaired mice had a 50% reduced H4 acetylation in APP/PS1 mice than wild-type littermates.6
In mice, histone deacetylase inhibitors heve restored histone acetylation and improved memory in mice with age-related impairments or in models for other neurodegenerative diseases.7
Further studies of histone acetylation in AD could lead to target therapies in the disease pathology of neurodegenerative diseases, and
  • increase our understanding of how epigenetic mechanisms, such as histone acetylation, alter gene regulation.
References
1. Waddington, C.H., (1942). ‘The epigenotype‘, Endeavour, 1942 (1), (pp. 18-20)
2. Sidoli, S., Cheng, L., and Jensen O.N. (2012) ‘Proteomics in chromatin biology and epigenetics: Elucidation of post-translational modifications of histone proteins by mass spectrometry‘, Journal of Proteomics, 75 (12), (pp. 3419-3433)
3. Zhang. K., et al. (2012) ‘Targeted proteomics for quantification of histone acetylation in Alzheimer’s disease‘, Proteomics, 12 (8), (pp. 1261-1268)
4. Darwanto, A., et al., (2010) ‘A modified “cross-talk” between histone H2B Lys-120 ubiquitination and H3 Lys-K79 methylation‘, The Journal of Biological Chemistry, 285 (28), (pp. 21868-21876)
5. Govindarajan, N., et al. (2011) ‘Sodium butyrate improves memory function in an Alzheimer’s disease model when administered at an advanced stage of disease progression‘, Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 26 (1), (pp.187-197)
6. Francis, Y.I., et al., (2009) ‘Dysregulation of histone acetylation in the APP/PS1 mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease‘, Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 18 (1), (pp. 131-139)
7. Kilgore, M., et al., (2010) ‘Inhibitors of class 1 histone deacetylases reverse contextual memory deficits in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease‘, Neuropsychopharmacology, 35 (4), (pp. 870-880)
Tags: acetylation, alzheimers disease, epigenetics, histone, targeted proteomics

Tau amyloid

An Outcast Among Peers Gains Traction on Alzheimer’s Cure

By JEANNE WHALEN   jeanne.whalen@wsj.com
Gareth Phillips for The Wall Street Journal
 November 10, 2012, on page A1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal
After years of effort, researcher Dr. Claude Wischik is awaiting the results of new clinical trials that will test his theory on the cause of Alzheimer’s.
Dr. Wischik, an Australian in his early 30s in the 1980s, was attempting to answer a riddle: What causes Alzheimer’s disease? He needed to examine brain tissue from Alzheimer’s patients soon after death, which required getting family approvals and enlisting mortuary technicians to extract the brains. He collected more than 300 over about a dozen years.
Alzheimer’s researcher Claude Wischik had a view that a brain protein called tau-not plaque is largely responsible. WSJ’s Shirley Wang spoke with Dr. Wischik about his work on a new drug to treat the devastating disease.
The 63-year-old researcher believes that a protein called tau
  • forms twisted fibers known as tangles inside the brain cells of Alzheimer’s patients and is largely responsible for driving the disease.
For 20 years, billions of dollars of pharmaceutical investment has placed chief blame on a different protein, beta amyloid, which
  • forms sticky plaques in the brains of sufferers.
A string of experimental drugs designed to attack beta amyloid have failed recently in clinical trials.

Wherefore Tau thy go?

Dr. Wischik, who now lives in Scotland, sees this as tau’s big moment. The company he co-founded 10 years ago, TauRx Pharmaceuticals Ltd., has developed an experimental Alzheimer’s drug that it will begin testing in the coming weeks in two large clinical trials. Other companies are also investing in tau research. Roche Holding bought the rights to a type of experimental tau drug from Switzerland’s closely held AC Immune SA.

Wischik is a scientist who has struggled against a prevailing orthodoxy. In 1854, British doctor John Snow traced a cholera outbreak in London to a contaminated water supply, but his discovery was rejected. A very infamous example is the discovery of the cause of child-bed fever in Rokitanski’s University of Vienna by Ignaz Semmelweis. In 1982, two Australian scientists declared that bacteria (H. pylori) caused peptic ulcers, later to be awarded the 2005 Nobel Prize in medicine for their discovery.
Dr. Wischik says he and other tau-focused scientists have been shouted down over the years by what he calls the “amyloid orthodoxy.”  But Dr. Wischik has been hampered by inconclusive research. A small clinical trial of TauRx’s drug in 2008 produced  mixed, results. Of course, influential scientists still think that beta amyloid plays a central role. Although Roche is investing in tau, Richard Scheller, head of drug research at Roche’s biotech unit, Genentech, says the company still has a strong interest in beta amyloid (hedging the bet).  He thinks amyloid drugs may have better results if  testing on Alzheimer’s patients occurs much earlier in the disease to prove effective; Roche recently announced plans to conduct such a trial.  Simply put -“Drugs tied to conventional theories on Alzheimer’s causes haven’t so far been effective.” Scientists Dr. Wischik accuses of wrongly fixating on beta amyloid argue that the evidence for pursuing amyloid is strong. One view expressed is that drugs to attack both beta amyloid and tau will be necessary.
Alzheimer’s disease is the leading cause of dementia in the elderly, and according to the World Health Organization, the cost of caring for dementia sufferers totals about $600 billion each year world-wide. The disease was first identified in 1906 by German physician Alois Alzheimer, who found in the brain of a deceased woman who had suffered from dementia the plaques and tangles that riddled the tissue. In the 1960s, Dr. Martin Roth and colleagues showed that
  • the degree of clinical dementia was worse for patients with more tangles in the brain.
In the 1980s, Dr. Wischik joined Dr. Roth’s research group at Cambridge University as a Ph.D student, and was quickly assigned the task of
  • determining what tangles were made of, which launched his brain-collecting mission, and years of examining tissue.
Finally, in 1988, he and colleagues at Cambridge published a paper demonstrating for the first time that
  • the tangles first observed by Alzheimer were made at least in part of the protein tau, which was supported by later research.
Like all of the body’s proteins, tau has a normal, helpful function—working inside neurons to help
  • stabilize the fibers that connect nerve cells.
When it misfires, tau clumps together to form harmful tangles that kill brain cells.
Dr. Wischik’s discovery was important news in the Alzheimer’s field:
  • identifying the makeup of tangles made it possible to start developing ways to stop their formation. But by the early 1990s, tau was overtaken by another protein: beta amyloid.

Signs of Decline

Several pieces of evidence convinced an influential group of scientists that beta amyloid was the primary cause of Alzheimer’s.
  •  the discovery of several genetic mutations that all but guaranteed a person would develop a hereditary type of the disease.
  • these appeared to increase the production or accumulation of beta amyloid in the brain,
  • which led scientists to believe that amyloid deposits were the main cause of the disease.
 Athena Neurosciences, a biotech company whose founders included Harvard’s Dr. Selkoe, focused in earnest on developing drugs to attack amyloid. Meanwhile, tau researchers say they found it hard to get research funding or to publish papers in medical journals. It became difficult to have a good publication on tau, because the amyloid cascade was like a dogma. It became the case that if you were not working in the amyloid field you were not working on Alzheimer’s disease. Dr. Wischik and his colleagues fought to keep funding from the UK’s Medical Research Council for the repository of brain tissue they maintained at Cambridge, he says. The brain bank became an important tool. In the early 1990s, Dr. Wischik and his colleagues compared the postmortem brains of Alzheimer’s sufferers against those of people who had died without dementia, to see how their levels of amyloid and tau differed. They found that both healthy brains and Alzheimer’s brains could be filled with amyloid plaque, but only Alzheimer’s brains contained aggregated tau.
  • as the levels of aggregated tau in a brain increased, so did the severity of dementia.
In the mid-1990s, Dr. Wischik discovered that
  • a drug sometimes used to treat psychosis dissolved tangles
Nevertheless, American and British venture capitalists wanted to invest in amyloid projects, not tau.
By 2002, Dr. Wischik scraped together about $5 million from Asian investors with the help of a Singaporean physician who was the father of a classmate of Dr. Wischik’s son in Cambridge. TauRx is based in Singapore but conducts most of its research in Aberdeen, Scotland. As his tau effort launched, early tests of drugs designed to attack amyloid plaques were disappointing. To better understand these results, a team of British scientists largely unaffiliated with Athena or the failed clinical trial decided to examine the brains of patients who had participated in the study. They waited for the patients to die, and then, after probing the brains, concluded that
  • the vaccine had indeed cleared amyloid plaque but hadn’t prevented further neurodegeneration.

Peter Davies, an Alzheimer’s researcher at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, NY, recalls hearing a researcher at a conference in the early 2000s concede that his amyloid research results “don’t fit the hypothesis, but we’ll continue until they do! “I just sat there with my mouth open,” he recalls.

In 2004, TauRx began a clinical trial of its drug, called methylene blue, in 332 Alzheimer’s patients. Around the same time, a drug maker called Elan Corp., which had bought Athena Neurosciences, began a trial of an amyloid-targeted drug called bapineuzumab in 234 patients. A key moment came in 2008, when Dr. Wischik and Elan presented results of their studies at an Alzheimer’s conference in Chicago. The Elan drug
  • failed to improve cognition any better than a placebo pill, causing Elan shares to plummet by more than 60% over the next few days.
The TauRx results Dr. Wischik presented were more positive, though not unequivocal. The study showed that,
  • after 50 weeks of treatment, Alzheimer’s patients taking a placebo had fallen 7.8 points on a test of cognitive function,
  • while people taking 60 mg of TauRx’s drug three times a day had fallen one point—
  • translating into an 87% reduction in the rate of decline for people taking the TauRx drug.
But TauRx didn’t publish a full set of data from the trial, causing some skepticism among researchers. (Dr. Wischik says it didn’t to protect the company’s commercial interests). What’s more,
  • a higher, 100-mg dose of the drug didn’t produce the same positive effects in patients;
Dr. Wischik blames this on the way the 100-mg dose was formulated, and says the company is testing a tweaked version of the drug in its new clinical trials, which will begin enrolling patients late this year.
This summer, a trio of companies that now own the rights to bapineuzumab—Elan, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson—
  • scrapped development of the drug after it failed to work in two large clinical trials.
Then in August, Eli Lilly & Co. said its experimental medicine targeting beta amyloid,
  • solanezumab, failed to slow the loss of memory or basic skills like bathing and dressing in two trials
  • involving 2,050 patients with mild or moderate Alzheimer’s.
Lilly has disclosed that in one of the trials, when moderate patients were stripped away,
  • the drug slowed cognitive decline only in patients with mild forms of the disease.
Still fervent believers assert that beta amyloid needs to be attacked very early in the disease cycle—
  • perhaps before symptoms begin.
This spring, the U.S. government said it would help fund a $100 million trial of Roche’s amyloid-targeted drug, crenezumab, in 300 people
  • who are genetically predisposed to develop early-onset Alzheimer’s but who don’t yet have symptoms.
This trial should help provide a “definitive” answer about the theory.
Scientists and investors are giving more attention to tau. Roche this year said it would pay Switzerland’s AC Immune an undisclosed upfront fee for the rights to a new type of tau-targeted drug, and up to CHF400 million in additional payments if any drugs make it to market.
Dr. Buee, the longtime tau researcher in France, says Johnson & Johnson asked him to provide advice on tau last year, and that he’s currently discussing a tau research contract with a big pharmaceutical company. (A Johnson & Johnson spokeswoman says the company invited Dr. Buee and other scientists to a meeting to discuss a range of approaches to fighting Alzheimer’s.)
With its new clinical trial program under way, TauRx is the first company to test a tau-targeted drug against Alzheimer’s in a large human study, known in the industry as a phase 3 trial.  Dr. Wischik

  • In the end…it’s down to the phase 3 trial.

Protein Degradation in Neurodegenerative Diseases

Cebollero E , Reggiori F  and Kraft C.  Ribophagy: Regulated Degradation of Protein Production Factories. Int J Cell Biol. 2012; 2012: 182834. doi:  10.1155/2012/182834 (online).

During autophagy, cytosol, protein aggregates, and organelles

  • are sequestered into double-membrane vesicles called autophagosomes and delivered to the lysosome/vacuole for breakdown and recycling of their basic components.

In all eukaryotes this pathway is important for

  • adaptation to stress conditions such as nutrient deprivation, as well as
  • to regulate intracellular homeostasis by adjusting organelle number and clearing damaged structures.

Starvation-induced autophagy has been viewed as a nonselective transport pathway; but recent studies have revealed that

  • autophagy is able to selectively engulf specific structures, ranging from proteins to entire organelles.

In this paper, we discuss recent findings on the mechanisms and physiological implications of two selective types of autophagy:

  • ribophagy, the specific degradation of ribosomes, and
  • reticulophagy, the selective elimination of portions of the ER.

Lee JH, Yu WH,…, Nixon RA.  Lysosomal Proteolysis and Autophagy Require Presenilin 1 and Are Disrupted by Alzheimer-Related PS1 Mutations. Cell 2010; 141, 1146–1158. DOI 10.1016/j.cell.2010.05.008.

Macroautophagy is a lysosomal degradative pathway essential for neuron survival. Here, we show

  • that macroautophagy requires the Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-related protein presenilin-1 (PS1).

In PS1 null blastocysts, neurons from mice hypomorphic for PS1 or conditionally depleted of PS1,

  • substrate proteolysis and autophagosome clearance during macroautophagy are prevented
  • as a result of a selective impairment of autolysosome acidification and cathepsin activation.

These deficits are caused by failed PS1-dependent targeting of the v-ATPase V0a1 subunit to lysosomes. N-glycosylation of the V0a1 subunit,

  • essential for its efficient ER-to-lysosome delivery,
  • requires the selective binding of PS1 holoprotein to the unglycosylated subunit and the  sec61alpha/ oligosaccharyltransferase complex.

PS1 mutations causing early-onset AD produce a similar lysosomal/autophagy phenotype in fibroblasts from AD patients. PS1 is therefore essential for v-ATPase targeting to lysosomes, lysosome acidification, and proteolysis during autophagy. Defective lysosomal proteolysis represents a basis for pathogenic protein accumulations and neuronal cell death in AD and suggests previously unidentified therapeutic targets.

Hanai JI, Cao P, Tanksale P, Imamura S, et al. The muscle-specific ubiquitin ligase atrogin-1/MAFbx mediates statin-induced muscle toxicity. The Journal of Clinical Investigation  2007; 117(12):3930-3951.    http://www.jci.org

Gene Wars Span Eons

Transposons have been barging into genomes and crossing species boundaries throughout evolution. Rapidly evolving bacterial species often use them to transmit antibiotic resistance to one another.  Nearly half of the DNA in the human genome consists of transposons, and the percentage can potentially creep upward with every generation. That’s because nearly 20 percent of transposons are capable of replicating in a way that is unconstrained by the normal rules of DNA replication during cell division ― although through generations over time, most have become inactivated and no longer pose a threat.

While humans are riddled with transposons, compared to some organisms, they’ve gotten off easy, according to Madhani, a professor of biochemistry and biophysics at UCSF. The water lily’s genome is 99 percent derived from transposons. The lowly salamander has about the same number of genes as humans, but in some species the genome is nearly 40 times bigger, due to all the inserted, replicating transposons.

The scientists’ discovery of SCANR and how it targets transposons in the yeast Cryptococcus neoformans builds upon the Nobel-Prize-winning discovery of jumping genes by maize geneticist Barbara McClintock, and the Nobel-prize-winning discovery by molecular biologists Richard Roberts and Phillip Sharp that parts of a single gene may be separated along chromosomes by intervening bits of DNA, called introns. Introns are transcribed into RNA from DNA but then are spliced out of the instructions for building proteins.

In the current study, the researchers discovered that the cell’s splicing machinery stalls when it gets to transposon introns. SCANR recognizes this glitch and

  • prevents transposon replication by
  • triggering the production of “small interfering RNA” molecules, which
  • neutralize the transposon RNA.

The earlier discovery by biologists Andrew Fire and Craig Mello of the phenomenon of RNA interference, a feature of this newly identified transposon targeting, also led to a Nobel Prize. “Scientists might find that many of the peculiar ways in which genes are expressed differently in higher organisms are, like

  • intron splicing in the case of SCANR, useful
  • in distinguishing and defending ‘self’ genes from ‘non-self’ genes,” Madhani said.

Researchers  at UCSF ( Phillip Dumesic, an MD/PhD student and first author of the study, graduate students Prashanthi Natarajan and Benjamin Schiller, and postdoctoral fellow Changbin Chen, PhD.) and collaborators at the Whitehead Institute of Medical Research in Cambridge, Mass., and from the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif., contributed to the research.

Researchers Discover Gene Invaders Are Stymied by a Cell’s Genome Defense

If unrestrained, transposons replicate and insert themselves randomly throughout the genome.

San Francisco, CA  (Scicasts) – Gene wars rage inside our cells, with invading DNA regularly threatening to subvert our human blueprint. Now, building on Nobel-Prize-winning findings, UC San Francisco researchers have discovered a molecular machine that helps protect a cell’s genes against these DNA interlopers.

The machine, named SCANR, recognizes and targets foreign DNA. The UCSF team identified it in yeast, but comparable mechanisms might also be found in humans. The targets of SCANR are

  • small stretches of DNA called transposons, a name that conjures images of alien scourges.

But transposons are real, and to some newborns, life threatening. Found inside the genomes

  • of organisms as simple as bacteria and
  • as complex as humans,

they are in a way alien ― at some point,

  • each was imported into its host’s genome from another species.

Unlike an organism’s native genes, which are reproduced a single time during cell division, transposons ― also called jumping genes ― replicate multiple times, and

  • insert themselves at random places within the DNA of the host cell.

When transposons insert themselves in the middle of an important gene, they may cause malfunction, disease or birth defects.

But just as the immune system has ways of distinguishing what is part of the body and what is foreign and does not belong, researchers led by UCSF’s Dr. Hiten Madhani, discovered in

  • SCANR a novel way through which the genetic machinery within a cell’s nucleus recognizes and targets transposons.

“We’ve known that only a fraction of human-inherited diseases are caused by these mobile genetic elements,” Madhani said. “Now we’ve found that cells use a step in gene expression to distinguish ‘self’ from ‘non-self’ and to halt the spread of transposons.” The study was published online Feb. 13 in the journal Cell (http://www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674%2813%2900138-4).

Epigenetics of brain and brawn

Study Shows Epigenetics Shapes Fate of Brain vs. Brawn Castes in Carpenter Ants

Philadelphia, PA (Scicasts) – The recently published genome sequences of seven well-studied ant species are opening up new vistas for biology and medicine.  A detailed look at molecular mechanisms that underlie the complex behavioural differences in two worker castes in the Florida carpenter ant, Camponotus floridanus, has revealed a link to epigenetics. This is the study of how the expression or suppression of particular genes by chemical modifications affects an organism’s

  • physical characteristics,
  • development, and
  • behaviour.

Epigenetic processes not only play a significant role in many diseases, but are also involved in longevity and aging. Interdisciplinary research teams led by Dr. Shelley Berger, from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, in collaboration with teams led by Danny Reinberg from New York University and Juergen Liebig from Arizona State University, describe their work in Genome Research. The group found that epigenetic regulation is key to

  • distinguishing one caste, the “majors”, as brawny Amazons of the carpenter ant colony,
  • compared to the “minors”, their smaller, brainier sisters.

These two castes have the same genes, but strikingly distinct behaviours and shape.

Ants, as well as termites and some bees and wasps, are eusocial species that organize themselves into rigid caste-based societies, or colonies, in which only one queen and a small contingent of male ants are usually fertile and reproduce. The rest of a colony is composed of functionally sterile females that are divided into worker castes that perform specialized roles such as

  • foragers,
  • soldiers, and
  • caretakers.

In Camponotus floridanus, there are two worker castes that are physically and behaviourally different, yet genetically very similar.  “For all intents and purposes, those two castes are identical when it comes to their gene sequences,” notes senior author Berger, professor of Cell and Developmental Biology. “The two castes are a perfect situation to understand

  • how epigenetics,
  • how regulation ‘above’ genes,

plays a role in establishing these dramatic differences in a whole organism.”

To understand how caste differences arise, the team examined the role of modifications of histones throughout the genome. They produced the first genome-wide epigenetic maps of genome structure in a social insect. Histones can be altered by the addition of small chemical groups, which affect the expression of genes. Therefore, specific histone modifications can create dramatic differences between genetically similar individuals, such as the physical and behavioural differences between ant castes. “These chemical modifications of histones alter how compact the genome is in a certain region,” Simola explains. “Certain modifications allow DNA to open up more, and some of them to close DNA more. This, in turn, affects how genes get expressed, or turned on, to make proteins.

In examining several different histone modifications, the team found a number of distinct differences between the major and minor castes. Simola states that the most notable modification,

  • discriminates the two castes from each other and
  • correlates well with the expression levels of different genes between the castes.

And if you look at which genes are being expressed between these two castes, these genes correspond very nicely to the brainy versus brawny idea. In the majors we find that genes that are involved in muscle development are expressed at a higher level, whereas in the minors, many genes involved in brain development and neurotransmission are expressed at a higher level.”

These changes in histone modifications between ant castes are likely caused by a regulator gene, called CBP, that has “already been implicated in aspects of learning and behaviour by genetic studies in mice and in certain human diseases,” Berger says. “The idea is that the same CBP regulator and histone modification are involved in a learned behaviour in ants – foraging – mainly in the brainy minor caste, to establish a pattern of gene regulation that leads to neuronal patterning for figuring out where food is and being able to bring the food back to the nest.”  Simola notes that “we know from mouse studies that if you inactivate or delete the CBP regulator, it actually leads to significant learning deficits in addition to craniofacial muscular malformations.  So from mammalian studies, it’s clear this is an important protein involved in learning and memory.”

The research team is looking ahead to expand the work by manipulating the expression of the CBP regulator in ants to observe effects on caste development and behaviour. Berger observes that all of the genes known to be major epigenetic regulators in mammals are conserved in ants, which makes them a  good model for studying behaviour and longevity.

Research Reveals Mechanism of Epigenetic Reprogramming

Cambridge, UK (Scicasts) – New research reveals a potential way for how parents’ experiences could be passed to their offspring’s genes.

Epigenetics is a system that turns our genes on and off. The process works by chemical tags, known as epigenetic marks, attaching to DNA and telling a cell to either use or ignore a particular gene. The most common epigenetic mark is a methyl group.

  • When these groups fasten to DNA through a process called methylation
  • they block the attachment of proteins which normally turn the genes on.

As a result, the gene is turned off.

Scientists have witnessed epigenetic inheritance, the observation that offspring may inherit altered traits due to their parents’ past experiences. For example, historical incidences of famine have resulted in health effects on the children and grandchildren of individuals who had restricted diets,

  • possibly because of inheritance of altered epigenetic marks caused by a restricted diet.

However, it is thought that between each generation

  • the epigenetic marks are erased in cells called primordial gene cells (PGC), the precursors to sperm and eggs.

This ‘reprogramming’ allows all genes to be read afresh for each new person – leaving scientists to question how epigenetic inheritance could occur.

The new Cambridge study initially discovered how the DNA methylation marks are erased in PGCs. The methylation marks are converted to hydroxymethylation which is then

  • progressively diluted out as the cells divide.

This process turns out to be remarkably efficient and seems to reset the genes for each new generation.

The researchers,  also found that some rare methylation can ‘escape’ the reprogramming process and can thus be passed on to offspring – revealing how epigenetic inheritance could occur. This is important because aberrant methylation could accumulate at genes during a lifetime in response to environmental factors, such as chemical exposure or nutrition, and can cause abnormal use of genes, leading to disease. If these marks are then inherited by offspring, their genes could also be affected. The  research demonstrates how genes could retain some memory of their past experiences, indicating that the idea that epigenetic information is erased between generations – should be reassessed.  The precursors to sperm and eggs are very effective in erasing most methylation marks, but they are fallible and at a low frequency may allow some epigenetic information to be transmitted to subsequent generations.

Professor Azim Surani from the University of Cambridge, principal investigator of the research, said: “The new study has the potential to be exploited in two distinct ways.

  1. how to erase aberrant epigenetic marks that may underlie some diseases in adults.
  2. address whether germ cells can acquire new epigenetic marks through environmental or dietary influences on parents that may evade erasure and be transmitted to subsequent generations

The research was published 25 January, in the journal Science. Story adapted from the University of Cambridge.

Study Suggests Expanding the Genetic Alphabet May Be Easier than Previously Thought

Featured In: Academia News | Genomics

Monday, June 4, 2012

A new study led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute suggests that the replication process for DNA—the genetic instructions for living organisms that is composed of four bases (C, G, A and T)—is more open to unnatural letters than had previously been thought. An expanded “DNA alphabet” could carry more information than natural DNA, potentially coding for a much wider range of molecules and enabling a variety of powerful applications, from precise molecular probes and nanomachines to useful new life forms.

The new study, which appears in the June 3, 2012 issue of Nature Chemical Biology, solves the mystery of how a previously identified pair of artificial DNA bases can go through the DNA replication process almost as efficiently as the four natural bases.

“We now know that the efficient replication of our unnatural base pair isn’t a fluke, and also that the replication process is more flexible than had been assumed,” said Floyd E. Romesberg, associate professor at Scripps Research, principal developer of the new DNA bases, and a senior author of the new study. The Romesberg laboratory collaborated on the new study with the laboratory of co-senior author Andreas Marx at the University of Konstanz in Germany, and the laboratory of Tammy J. Dwyer at the University of San Diego.

Adding to the DNA Alphabet

Romesberg and his lab have been trying to find a way to extend the DNA alphabet since the late 1990s. In 2008, they developed the efficiently replicating bases NaM and 5SICS, which come together as a complementary base pair within the DNA helix, much as, in normal DNA, the base adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), and cytosine (C) pairs with guanine (G).

The following year, Romesberg and colleagues showed that NaM and 5SICS could be efficiently transcribed into RNA in the lab dish. But these bases’ success in mimicking the functionality of natural bases was a bit mysterious. They had been found simply by screening thousands of synthetic nucleotide-like molecules for the ones that were replicated most efficiently. And it had been clear immediately that their chemical structures lack the ability to form the hydrogen bonds that join natural base pairs in DNA. Such bonds had been thought to be an absolute requirement for successful DNA replication‑—a process in which a large enzyme, DNA polymerase, moves along a single, unwrapped DNA strand and stitches together the opposing strand, one complementary base at a time.

An early structural study of a very similar base pair in double-helix DNA added to Romesberg’s concerns. The data strongly suggested that NaM and 5SICS do not even approximate the edge-to-edge geometry of natural base pairs—termed the Watson-Crick geometry, after the co-discoverers of the DNA double-helix. Instead, they join in a looser, overlapping, “intercalated” fashion. “Their pairing resembles a ‘mispair,’ such as two identical bases together, which normally wouldn’t be recognized as a valid base pair by the DNA polymerase,” said Denis Malyshev, a graduate student in Romesberg’s lab who was lead author along with Karin Betz of Marx’s lab.

Yet in test after test, the NaM-5SICS pair was efficiently replicable. “We wondered whether we were somehow tricking the DNA polymerase into recognizing it,” said Romesberg. “I didn’t want to pursue the development of applications until we had a clearer picture of what was going on during replication.”

Edge to Edge

To get that clearer picture, Romesberg and his lab turned to Dwyer’s and Marx’s laboratories, which have expertise in finding the atomic structures of DNA in complex with DNA polymerase. Their structural data showed plainly that the NaM-5SICS pair maintain an abnormal, intercalated structure within double-helix DNA—but remarkably adopt the normal, edge-to-edge, “Watson-Crick” positioning when gripped by the polymerase during the crucial moments of DNA replication.

“The DNA polymerase apparently induces this unnatural base pair to form a structure that’s virtually indistinguishable from that of a natural base pair,” said Malyshev.

NaM and 5SICS, lacking hydrogen bonds, are held together in the DNA double-helix by “hydrophobic” forces, which cause certain molecular structures (like those found in oil) to be repelled by water molecules, and thus to cling together in a watery medium. “It’s very possible that these hydrophobic forces have characteristics that enable the flexibility and thus the replicability of the NaM-5SICS base pair,” said Romesberg. “Certainly if their aberrant structure in the double helix were held together by more rigid covalent bonds, they wouldn’t have been able to pop into the correct structure during DNA replication.”

An Arbitrary Choice?

The finding suggests that NaM-5SICS and potentially other, hydrophobically bound base pairs could some day be used to extend the DNA alphabet. It also hints that Evolution’s choice of the existing four-letter DNA alphabet—on this planet—may have been somewhat arbitrary. “It seems that life could have been based on many other genetic systems,” said Romesberg.

He and his laboratory colleagues are now trying to optimize the basic functionality of NaM and 5SICS, and to show that these new bases can work alongside natural bases in the DNA of a living cell.

“If we can get this new base pair to replicate with high efficiency and fidelity in vivo, we’ll have a semi-synthetic organism,” Romesberg said. “The things that one could do with that are pretty mind blowing.”

The other contributors to the paper, “KlenTaq polymerase replicates unnatural base pairs by inducing a Watson-Crick geometry,” are Thomas Lavergne of the Romesberg lab, Wolfram Welte and Kay Diederichs of the Marx lab, and Phillip Ordoukhanian of the Center for Protein and Nucleic Acid Research at The Scripps Research Institute.

Source: The Scripps Research Institute

 

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