Thursday, May 26, 2016

Food poisoning, Alzheimer’s maybe linked




A study from Harvard university has Dr. Doug Powell wondering whether food-poisoning bacteria, such as salmonella, might be responsible for Alzheimer’s disease.

The study found that the immune response to infectious invaders is to trap them in a sticky cage of proteins.

After the fight, these cages of proteins are left in the brain and are the plaque that’s “a hallmark of Alzheimer’s,” writes Gina Kokata of the New York Times.

As people age, the membrane around the brain becomes porous so infectious bacteria can get inside and then the immune response kicks in. That explains why Alzheimer’s shows up in the brains of older people.

So far, the research group has confirmed this hypothesis in neurons growing in petri dishes as well as in yeast, roundworms, fruit flies and mice. 

There is much more work to be done to determine if a similar sequence happens in humans, but plans — and funding — are in place to start those studies, involving a multicenter project that will examine human brains.

“It’s interesting and provocative,” said Dr. Michael W. Weiner, a radiology professor at the University of California, San Francisco, and a principal investigator of the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, a large national effort to track the progression of the disease and look for biomarkers like blood proteins and brain imaging to signal the disease’s presence.

The work began when Robert D. Moir, of Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, had an idea about the function of amyloid proteins, normal brain proteins whose role had long been a mystery.

The proteins were traditionally thought to be garbage that accumulates in the brain with age. But Dr. Moir noticed that they looked a lot like proteins of the innate immune system, a primitive system that is the body’s first line of defense against infections.

In one study, the group injected Salmonella bacteria into the brains of young mice that did not have plaques.

“Overnight, the bacteria seeded plaques,” Dr. Tanzi said. “The hippocampus was full of plaques, and each plaque had a single bacterium at its center.”