Saturday, February 23, 2019

ALZHEIMER’S RESEARCH RIGHT NOW! #2: Adorable Hamsters May Hold Key To Curing Alzheimer’s!!!!


From the first moment I discovered my dad had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, it seemed like I was alone in this ugly place. Even ones who had loved ones suffering in this way; even though people TALKED about the disease, it felt for me like they did little more than mumble about the experience. Not one to shut up for any known reason, I added a section to this blog…

Every month, I’ll be highlighting Alzheimer’s research that is going on RIGHT NOW! Harvested from different websites, journals and podcasts, I’ll translate them into understandable English and share them with you. Today: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/02/190206104607.htm

“When hamsters and other small mammals hibernate, their brains undergo structural and metabolic changes to help neurons survive low temperatures. A key event in this process appears to be the phosphorylation of a protein called tau, which has been implicated in AD. In the brains of hibernating animals, phosphorylated tau can form tangled structures similar to those seen in AD patients. However, the structures disappear and tau phosphorylation is rapidly and fully reversed when the hibernating animal wakes up.”

This article caught my eye because I’ve always been fascinated by the idea of “cold sleep”. Many science fiction stories use it as a possible way for Humans to travel interplanetary or interstellar distances and awake at their destination barely aged from the moment they were placed in it.

Notable examples of the idea are the Star Trek Original Series episode, “Space Seed”, in which Ricardo Montalban and his genetically altered cronies – who had, incidentally, attempted to take over all the governments on Earth and were arrested, tried, and exiled from Earth. Packed into the slow starship, BOTANY BAY, they were shot into space prior to the invention of warp drive and discovered by the USS Enterprise and reawakened. Various tense situations ensued until the crew of the Enterprise sent them, refrozen, on their way to a colony world called Ceti Alpha V…

A more recent example of using “cold sleep” or “suspended animation” is the 2016 film, “Passengers” in which the gorgeous Jennifer Lawrence and the dashing Christopher Pratt are colonists on a “sleeper ship” voyage that will take some 120 years to complete. Something goes wrong, and Pratt wakes up alone. He lasts a year, then wakes Lawrence up and after much angst, the Avalon really malfunctions and they have to save the crew and passengers (5256 of them).

Research continues into the idea of suspended animation, and scientists have even discovered that weird little creatures called tardigrades or “water bears” can actually form something called “living glass” (https://www.sciencealert.com/we-can-now-harness-the-tardigrade-s-strangest-superpower-and-give-it-to-other-organisms) and can be revived from this state decades later.

At any rate, the hamster brains form the dreaded tau proteins, which, along with plaques, are believed to be the major components causing Alzheimer’s. The thing is that, when the hamster awaken, the tau proteins vanish…

Why is that? The chemistry of the hamster’s brains change dramatically, some 337 new chemicals flood it that are different from those in a normally functioning (Siberian hamster) brain. “The largest change for any metabolite -- about 5-fold more in hibernating animals compared with control animals -- was for phosphatidic acid, which is known to activate an enzyme that phosphorylates tau.” IOW, the tau proteins that create the plaques in THEIR brains (and the plaques are very similar to the ones that form in the brain of our beloved family members who suffer from Alzheimer’s) VANISH once the cutie fuzzball wakes up! So there’s something in the hamster brain that changes the protein back into its former benign nature.

What does this mean for our parents or for others who are just now discovering that they may be in the early stages of Alzheimer’s?

It’s just one more bit of hope to hold out to those who are just beginning this long – and for me and my family – recently completed journey.


No comments:

Post a Comment