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Scientists reveal clue to why brain cells die in Alzheimers
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Scientists reveal clue to why brain cells die in Alzheimers

Scientists at the University of Queensland have uncovered a major clue to why some brain cells die in neurodegenerative diseases.

Washington, Feb 8 : Scientists at the University of Queensland have uncovered a major clue to why some brain cells die in neurodegenerative diseases.

The researchers hope that their study, which adds more weight to the "use it or lose it" model for brain function, will eventually lead to treatments for neuro-degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's and stroke.

QBI's Dr Elizabeth Coulson said a baby's brain generates roughly double the number of nerve cells it needs to function; with those cells that receive both chemical and electrical stimuli surviving, and the remaining cells dying.

In the study, Dr Coulson and her colleagues have identified a crucial step in the cell-death process.

"It appears that if a cell is not appropriately stimulated by other cells, it self-destructs," she said.

This self-destruct process is also known to be an important factor in stroke, Alzheimer's and motor neuron diseases, leading to the loss of essential nerve cells from the adult brain.

"We know that a lack of both chemical and electrical stimuli causes the cells to self-destruct," Dr Coulson said.

"But we believe that nerve cells will survive if appropriate electrical stimuli are produced to block the self-destruct process that we have identified," she added.

The researchers' next step is to test whether dying cells receiving only electrical stimulation can be rescued.

More than three years' research has gone into understanding these crucial factors regulating nerve cell survival, but it is a major step in the long process of discovery needed to combat neurodegeneration.

QBI Director, Professor Perry Bartlett said the research is an extremely exciting finding because it also provides the missing piece of information as to how the brain likely keeps alive the new neurons it generates in some brain areas as an adult.

"Combining this with our knowledge of how to stimulate new neurons in the brain of adults following to disease processes such as stroke, it provides new mechanisms for the treatment of a variety of diseases from depression to dementia," Bartlett said.

The study appears in the Journal of Neuroscience.

ANI

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