Scientific News Health care Other illnesses and advices ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE MAY ORIGINATE IN THE BRAIN'S WHITE MATTER
ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE MAY ORIGINATE IN THE
BRAIN'S WHITE MATTER
Changes in the brain's white matter may play a
major role in the onset of Alzheimer's disease, whose baffling origin has
traditionally been blamed on the gray matter. The new findings could provide a
fresh direction for Alzheimer's research in this neglected part of the brain,
offering the potential for early diagnosis and enhanced therapies.
The results are reported in the Sept. 17 print
edition of Biochemistry, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Chemical
Society, the world's largest scientific society.
"Alzheimer's disease is conventionally
considered a disease of the brain gray matter because its most prominent
consequence is severe memory loss," says Alex Roher, M.D., Ph.D., director
of the Sun Health Research Institute in Sun City, Ariz., and lead author of the
paper. The overwhelming majority of Alzheimer's research has focused on gray
matter, despite the fact that white matter makes up about 50 percent of total
brain tissue and is substantially altered during Alzheimer's progression, Roher
says.
The prevailing theory has been that changes in
the white matter are simply effects of the initial gray matter alterations, but
Roher's research suggests the opposite may be the case: white matter changes
could come first.
In the brain, a layer of gray tissue surrounds a
whitish core, like the peel of an orange around its juicy interior. The gray
exterior consists of neurons and their associated neurites — short protrusions
that communicate with neighboring neurons. This gray matter essentially acts as
the brain's central processor.
Neurons send messages through the brain and to
the central nervous system by transmitting electrical signals over long
appendages called axons. Axons are covered with an insulating fatty sheath,
known as myelin, which speeds up the transmission of the signals. Myelin is the
major component of white matter.
"Ours is the first study to present a
detailed biochemical analysis of white matter tissue of Alzheimer's disease
patients," Roher says. The researchers studied brain tissue from two groups
of people: those with autopsy-diagnosed Alzheimer's disease, and those who died
from other causes with no associated dementia.
The study revealed that the total amounts of
protein, lipids and cholesterol were significantly reduced in the myelin of
Alzheimer's patients in comparison to the control group. This erosion of the
myelin sheath is referred to as demyelination. "These profound white matter
alterations undoubtedly contribute to the origin and development of Alzheimer's
disease, and might possibly be the initiating step," Roher says. There are
multiple reasons for arriving at this conclusion, according to Roher, but two in
particular stand out.
First, previous studies have demonstrated that
patients with pre-clinical Alzheimer's disease show deterioration in the white
matter before the gray matter. Second, the current study suggests that white
matter degeneration might be caused by a disease of the oligodendrocytes, whose
main job is to produce the myelin sheath. A defective myelin coating could leave
the axons unprotected, resulting in serious disturbances in nerve conduction and
damage to brain functions, Roher says.
Because neurons in the gray matter are vital to
cognitive activity, scientists have generally assumed that Alzheimer's disease
— with its memory loss and other cognitive debilitations — must begin in the
gray matter. But Roher says the white matter is just as critical to cognitive
function. White matter axons play a major role in controlling mental activities
like emotion, and all mental functions are fully expressed only when the axons
are transmitting properly.
An analogy can be drawn from the recent energy
crisis in California, Roher says. One of the many issues facing Californians was
a short supply of power — attributable, in part, to an unusually cold winter
and a dry summer at hydroelectric dams. A suggested solution was to increase the
output of coal-fired plants. But the state's infrastructure — power lines,
transfer stations, etc. — would be unable to carry the extra power, thus
negating any potential benefits. So it is with the brain's transmission
infrastructure: the white matter.
The researchers found two other interesting
relationships. Women tended to have more alterations in their white matter than
men, a finding consistent with the general predominance of Alzheimer's cases in
women. An increased level of apolipoprotein E, which has been associated with
higher risk of Alzheimer's, also showed a correlation with greater demyelination.
Roher says he hopes that Alzheimer's researchers
will expand their area of interest to include white matter: "Only if the
full extent of Alzheimer's disease pathology is known will present attempts to
intervene in the progression of the disease have any reasonable chance of
success."
###
This study was partially supported by the State
of Arizona Alzheimer's Disease Research Center and by the National Institutes of
Health.
— Jason Gorss
The online version of the research paper
cited above was initially published Aug. 22 on the journal's Web site.
Journalists can arrange access to this site by sending e-mail to newsroom@acs.org
or calling the contact person for this release.
Alex Roher, M.D., Ph.D.,
is director of the Sun Health Research Institute in Sun City, Arizona.
Contact: Beverly Hassell, b_hassell@acs.org,
202-872-4065, American
Chemical Society
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a American
Chemical Society
Publishing date: September 24, 2002
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