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Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry

 

Conceptual image showing blurred brain with loss of neuronal networks. Image Credit: Kateryna Kon

In a breakthrough, researchers have developed a new way to target the toxic particles that destroy healthy brain cells in Alzheimer’s disease.

Academics here in the department working with collaborators at Lund University in Sweden have devised the first strategy to 'go after' the cause of the devastating disease, leading to hope that new drugs could be developed to treat dementia.

This is the first time that a systematic method to go after the cause of Alzheimer’s disease has been proposed.

Professor Michele Vendruscolo is co-director of the Centre for Misfolding Diseases here and one of the scientists here who led the research hailed as a 'world first'. He says: "This is the first time that a systematic method to go after the pathogens – the cause of Alzheimer’s disease - has been proposed. Until very recently scientists couldn’t agree on what the cause was so we didn’t have a target. The pathogens have now been identified as small clumps of proteins known as oligomers and we have been able to develop a strategy to aim drugs at these toxic particles."

Dementia is the leading cause of death in the UK and the cost of dementia is expected to more than double in the next 25 years, from £26 billion to £55 billion. Estimates put the cost to the global economy at nearly a trillion dollars every year.

Alzheimer's disease leads to the death of nerve cells and tissue loss throughout the brain. Over time, the brain dramatically shrinks and the cell destruction causes memory failure, personality changes, and problems carrying out daily activities.

Scientists identified abnormal deposits called protein oligomers as the most likely suspects of the cause of dementia. Although proteins are normally responsible for important cell processes, when people have Alzheimer’s disease these proteins become rogue and kill healthy nerve cells.

Proteins need to fold into a specific structure to function properly. When this folding process fails, the cell has a serious ‘misfolding problem’, as dangerous deposits can be formed instead that the brain can’t get rid of which can cause dementia. Misfolded proteins form abnormal clusters called plaques which build up between nerve cells stopping them from signalling properly. Dying nerve cells also contain tangles which are twisted strands of protein which destroy a vital cell transport system, which means nutrients and other essential supplies can no longer move through the cells.

Michele explains: “A healthy brain has a quality control system that effectively disposes of potentially dangerous masses of particles, known as aggregates. Upon ageing, the brain becomes less able to get rid of the dangerous deposits, leading to disease. It is like a household recycling system, if you have a productive system in place then the waste gets disposed of in a timely manner. If not, over time you accumulate garbage that you don’t need. It is the same in the brain.”

The research was carried out by an international team of scientists that also included Professor Sir Christopher Dobson, fellow co-director of the Centre for Misfolding Diseases, which is housed in our newly-opened Chemistry of Health building. Their research paper has just been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

In 2012 dementia research in the UK received six times less funding than cancer research

Sir Christopher, who is also Master of St John's College, Cambridge, says: "This interdisciplinary study shows that it is possible not just to find compounds that target the toxic oligomers that give rise to neurodegenerative disorders but also to increase their potency in a rational manner. It now makes it possible to design molecules that have specific effects on the various stages of disorders such as Alzheimer’s, and hopefully to convert them into drugs that can be used in a clinical environment."

Dementia costs the health and social care sector more than cancer and heart disease combined, and receives a disproportionately low amount of research investment – in 2012 dementia research in the UK received six times less funding than cancer research.

There have been approximately 400 clinical trials analysing Alzheimer’s disease but none of them have targeted the specific pathogens that cause it. In the UK, dementia is the only condition in the top 10 causes of death without a treatment to prevent, cure or slow its progression.

Michele adds: "All the previous clinical trials that have focused on finding drugs to modify the disease have failed. The trials that have succeeded have given us a handful of drugs, but these drugs can only treat the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease, not its onset and progression. Our research is based on the major conceptual step of identifying protein oligomers as the pathogens, and reports a method to systematically develop compounds to target them. This approach enables a new drug discovery strategy."

Drug discovery involves screening of chemical libraries, identification of the active ingredient from a natural remedy or design resulting from an understanding of the target, in this case the protein oligomers. Development includes further studies, clinical trials and ultimately regulatory approval.

The team hopes that it will take about two years for their first drug candidates to reach clinical trials for people affected by the debilitating disease. They also co-founded Wren Therapeutics, a biotechnology company based in the Chemistry of Health building, whose mission it is to take the ideas developed here and translate them into finding new ways to diagnose and  treat Alzheimer’s disease and other misfolding disorders.

The group’s new strategy is based on an innovative chemical kinetics approach developed in the last ten years by scientists led jointly by Professor Tuomas Knowles, also a co-director of the Centre for Misfolding Diseases, Professor Dobson and Professor Vendruscolo, in collaboration with scientists at Lund University led by Professor Sara Linse.

Tuomas says: "We are very excited about the potential of chemical kinetics for drug discovery against protein misfolding diseases. Since the process of aggregation is highly dynamic, the framework of kinetics allows us to approach this problem in a new way and find approaches to stop the generation of toxic proteins species at their very source."

The advance has also been welcomed by leading medical experts.

Dr David Reynolds, Chief Scientific Officer from Alzheimer’s Research UK, said: "This is a detailed academic study looking at how quickly compounds are able to stop amyloid building up into toxic clumps, which are characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease. With no treatments to slow or stop the diseases that cause dementia, it’s vital we improve approaches like this that could help refine the drug discovery progress and accelerate new treatments for people living with Alzheimer’s."