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7 July 1999. Findings reported in tomorrow’s issue of Nature raise the
tantalizing possibility of using vaccination to prevent or ameliorate
Alzheimer’s disease. In the study, by Dale Schenk and colleagues at
Elan Pharmaceuticals, PDAPP transgenic mice were immunized with
synthetic Aβ42. These transgenics, which over-express a gene
responsible for an inherited form of Alzheimer’s disease in humans,
develop amyloid plaques, astrogliosis and dystrophic neurite as they
age. But injections of Aβ42 given at a youthful six weeks
essentially prevented these changes as the mice aged. What’s more, when
given to 11-month-old mice, which already have well-established
pathology, Aβ42 injections significantly reduced the extent and
progression of the pathology.
These findings, while intriguing, are just a first step. Many questions
and problems need to be addressed before an Alzheimer’s vaccine can even
be considered. These transgenic mouse models offer only an incomplete
model of the human disease. While they accumulate amyloid in their
brains, these mice do not display all of the behavioral, histological or
physiological defects seen in AD. Moreover, as Peter St George-Hyslop
and David Westaway point out in an accompanying News and Views article,
it is not yet known whether extracellular Aβ deposits are causing
neuronal dysfunction and death, or are merely a consequence of the
disease. What the current study offers is another method by which to
test this critical question.-Hakon Heimer.
Reference:Schenk D, Barbour R, Dunn W, Gordon G, Grajeda H, Guido T, Hu K, Huang J, Johnson-Wood K, Khan K, Kholodenko D, Lee M, Liao Z, Lieberburg I, Motter R, Mutter L, Soriano F, Shopp G, Vasquez N, Vandevert C, Walker S, Wogulis M, Yednock T, Games D, Seubert P. Immunization with amyloid-beta attenuates Alzheimer-disease-like pathology in the PDAPP mouse. Nature 1999 Jul 8;400(6740):173-7. Abstract
St George-Hyslop PH, Westaway DA. Alzheimer's disease. Antibody clears senile plaques. Nature 1999 Jul 8;400(6740):116-7. Abstract
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