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Sunday, 18 February 2018

Faculty, students dedicated to identifying catalyst for Alzheimer's disease


untitled-2Neuroscience program faculty member Kevin Park thinks his work studying Alzheimer’s disease is like examining the aftermath of a car crash.

“Alzheimer’s disease is what you see afterward,” he said. “You have accident investigators trying to figure out what led to this effect. It could have been many things.”

Park and his team of graduate and undergraduate students are the investigators on the scene, trying to initiate Alzheimer’s disease in a mouse model so the catalyst for the disease can be identified.

“By having a model that is quite constrained and systematic, we are trying to figure out whether we can identify a specific mechanism that causes this (disease),” Park said.

The aftermath of Alzheimer’s disease is observed by three characteristics in an affected brain, Park said: plaques, tangles and neuronal loss — otherwise known as cell death.

Plaques are a build-up of proteins between nerve cells in the brain. Tangles cut off nutrients to others cells.

Neuronal loss, Park said, is a little more complicated.

“Typically, neurons (are) post-mitotic, which means they are not going to multiply and divide,” said Ireland graduate student Tomas Barrett.

In a brain affected by Alzheimer’s disease, the neurons are given instructions to do so, which instead causes cell death.

Source :- cm-life

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