Home Discovery reveals way to stop inflammation in Alzheimer’s, more
News

Discovery reveals way to stop inflammation in Alzheimer’s, more

Contributors

uva health systemA new discovery about the immune system may allow doctors to treat harmful inflammation that damages the brain in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s. It might also let doctors save patients from the potentially deadly inflammation of sepsis, a full-body infection that kills a quarter-million Americans every year.

The finding “opens up a whole new research area to look at neuroinflammation in the context of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s,” said lead researcher Bimal Desai, PhD, of the University of Virginia School of Medicine. “But the clinical impact will be in many, many different areas.”

Neurological Treatments

Traditional treatments for neurological inflammation, such as in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, are largely ineffective because biological drugs are blocked by what is known as the blood-brain barrier. That barrier protects the brain from dangers such as bacteria or toxins in the blood, but it also makes it very difficult to get drugs into the brain. “A lot of the drugs we use right now to treat inflammation, [known as] biologicals, don’t work in the brain because they can’t get through,” explained Desai, of UVA’s Department of Pharmacology and UVA’s Carter Immunology Center.

His new finding, involving important immune cells known as macrophages (and microglia), could offer a way around that. He and his team have identified a specific electrical switch, known as an ion channel, within macrophages that controls the flow of calcium into the cells. Without calcium, the cells can’t cause inflammation. By targeting this switch with tiny molecules, researchers could deny the macrophages calcium and prevent inflammation – even in the brain.

A Better Way to Battle Inflammation

That could let researchers develop a new and better way to stop inflammation. “Small molecules are perhaps more affordable as treatments and can hit things like this ion channel switch, TRPM7,” said researcher Michael Schappe, a graduate student in Desai’s lab. “We could use that to address inflammation in a bunch of contexts, but particularly in instances like neuroinflammation, where [current] treatments are particularly ineffective.”

Desai noted that drug companies are already at work on drugs that could target this type of switch. And that could be good news for patients with many inflammatory diseases. “Right now, you have conditions like arthritis or IBD [inflammatory bowel disease], where inflammation plays a huge role. They do have very good drugs for them, but these drugs are extremely expensive and cannot be taken orally by the patients. They can cost as much as $20,000 a year,” he said. “The reason for that is that they’re biologicals. They’re protein molecules that are very difficult to make and distribute. But having identified an ion channel as a target in this context allows you to use small molecules, which are ridiculously cheap compared to biologicals and can be taken orally by the patients.”

The discovery of the new drug target, the researchers noted, was made possible by something very unusual about UVA. To learn more, visit the Making of Medicine blog at makingofmedicine.virginia.edu/2018/02/26/the-switch-that-could-shut-down-inflammation-even-in-the-brain/

Findings Published

The researchers have published their findings in the scientific journal Immunity. The study’s authors were Schappe, Kalina Szteyn, Marta E. Stremska, Suresh K. Mendu, Taylor K. Downs, Philip V. Seegren, Michelle A. Mahoney, Sumeet Dixit, Julia K. Krupa, Eric J. Stipes, Jason S. Rogers, Samantha E. Adamson, Norbert Leitinger and Desai.

The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health, grants GM108989 and 5T32GM007055-41.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

joe tiroly uva baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: There is a tomorrow, after upset of #8 Southern Miss

dan chemotti richmond lacrosse
Etc.

Richmond signs lacrosse coach Dan Chemotti to extension after UVA interest

UR Lacrosse coach Dan Chemotti, who told Inside Lacrosse that he was a candidate in the UVA Lacrosse search before withdrawing his name from consideration, got himself a contract extension at Richmond.

sports illustrated
Etc.

Back in the day: Sports Illustrated used to be the highlight of my week

A big reason I was attracted to journalism was Sports Illustrated, which is, sadly, hanging on by a thread, with another round of layoffs announced on Friday taking out most of what the once-great magazine has left.

Virginia Tech
Politics, Virginia

Clean Virginia raises issue with Spanberger Virginia Tech BOV appointment

virginia drought
Virginia

This week’s rain was helpful, but Virginia DEQ says we’re still in a drought

stafford county bus crash
Virginia

Mother, father, two kids identified in deadly bus crash in Stafford County

baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Unprepared ‘Hoos pantsed by Jacksonville State in NCAA opener