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e-Article

Young Blood Plasma Administration to Fight Alzheimer's Disease?
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Rejuvenation Research. Apr2018, Vol. 21 Issue 2, p178-181. 4p.
Subject
*ALZHEIMER'S disease diagnosis
*BLOOD plasma
*SYMPTOMS
*DISEASE progression
*BLOOD circulation
*ALZHEIMER'S disease treatment
*MEMORY disorders
*AGE distribution
*ALZHEIMER'S disease
*ANIMALS
*BIOLOGICAL models
*CELLULAR signal transduction
*RED blood cell transfusion
*MICE
*PREVENTION
Language
ISSN
1549-1684
Abstract
Despite decades of intensive research, no drugs can cure or even stabilize Alzheimer's disease (AD). Current pharmacological treatments only partially mask the symptoms while the disease progresses within the brain. Finding a preventive measure or a cure for people with AD is indeed a worldwide urgent priority. A recent interesting study by T. Wyss-Coray's research group provides the first evidence that exposure to young blood or plasma can reverse some AD-related molecular and behavioral alterations. Heterochronic parabiosis (shared blood circulation) of AD transgenic mice with young healthy mice did not reduce amyloidosis and microglial activation in AD mice, but reversed the loss of synaptophysin and calbindin (critical synaptic proteins, indicators of cognitive decline in AD) in the dentate gyrus, and the abnormal expression, in the hippocampus, of many genes involved in key neuronal signaling pathways. Moreover, repeated intravenous administration of plasma from young healthy mice to AD mice reversed the excessive phosphorylation of hippocampal extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), and improved spatial working memory and associative memory. Although observations in mouse models of AD might not necessarily extrapolate to humans, this preclinical study provides the first demonstration that young plasma has potential therapeutic properties, by ameliorating aspects of the disease that are present in AD patients. Clinical trials are already under way. If young plasma transfusion will be effective in AD patients, it will be important to identify the key factors responsible for the positive effects, as they might lead to the development of molecule interventions with a better efficacy/risk profile. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]