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Rescuing
Fruit Flies from Alzheimer’s Disease
findings could benefit Alzheimer’s patients
Penn Researchers reverse Cognitive Decline
in Flies with Alzheimer’s Gene Mutation
Newswise, July 2010 — Investigators have found that fruit
fly (Drosophila melanogaster) males -- in
which the activity of an Alzheimer’s disease
protein is reduced by 50 percent -- show
impairments in learning and memory as they
age. What’s more, the researchers were able
to prevent the age-related deficits by
treating the flies with drugs such as
lithium, or by genetic manipulations that
reduced nerve-cell signaling.
The research team -- Thomas A. Jongens, Ph.D., associate
professor of Genetics at the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine; Sean M. J.
McBride M.D, Ph.D. and Thomas McDonald M.D.,
at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine;
and Catherine Choi M.D., Ph.D. at Drexel
University College of Medicine – worked with
the familial form of Alzheimer’s disease
(FAD), an aggressive form of the disease
that is caused by mutations in one of the
two copies of the presenilin (PS) or amyloid
precursor protein (APP) genes.
Studies in animal models have previously shown that the
FAD-linked PS mutations lead to less
presenilin (psn) protein activity.
Their findings are published the
Journal of Neuroscience.
“The results from our study suggest a new route to explore
for the treatment of familial Alzheimer’s
disease and possibly the more common
sporadic forms of Alzheimer’s disease,”
notes Jongens. “They also reveal that proper
presenilin activity levels are required to
maintain normal cognitive capabilities
during aging.”
Learning and Memory Tests in Flies
Fruit flies can hardly take a pen-and-pencil
test to assess age-related memory decline.
Instead, the team relied on the ability to
train fruit fly males to learn and remember
courtship behavior.
During courtship the male fly performs an instinctive set
of behaviors to both determine if the female
is receptive and to entice her to mate. The
courtship activity that a male displays
toward a female is affected by several
factors, including the type of pheromones
produced by the female, as well as her
response to his courtship attempts.
If the
female is not receptive she releases less
attractive pheromones and more aggressively
discourages the male to court her. Under
these conditions, the male will quickly
learn to not court her as well as other
females and will remember this for several
hours.
The researchers found that with age, the presenilin mutant
– the Alzheimer’s fruit fly model -- lost
the ability to learn and remember and that
this age-onset cognitive deficit could be
prevented by treating the flies with drugs,
or by genetic manipulations that reduce
metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR)
signaling. MGluR is located on the surface
of neurons, including in the hippocampus – a
major memory and learning center in the
brain.
In addition, treatment of older flies with
these same drugs reversed the age-dependent
deficits.
"A clear advantage of the drugs used in this study is that
one, lithium, is currently FDA approved for
other indications and the other class of
drugs, the mGluR antagonists, are currently
in clinical trials in humans for the
treatment of Fragile X syndrome,” comments
Choi .
"We demonstrate that these treatments, even when begun
after the onset of cognitive impairment, can
reverse memory deficits,” says McBride.
“This indicates that there is a window of
time during which memory is impaired, but
the cellular function can still be rescued
with proper treatment, again allowing for
the ability to form proper memory. This is a
critical finding since in humans Alzheimer’s
is diagnosed only clinically after the onset
of cognitive impairment. So, this finding
may indicate that even at the point of early
memory impairment, the disease may be
reversible.”
Relation to Fragile X Syndrome
In attempts to identify related pathways
affected by a reduction in presenilin
activity, the team performed genetic tests
with genes known to affect cognition. They
found that the presenilin mutation
genetically interacts with the Fragile X
mutation in fruit flies. Fragile X is the
most common genetically inherited form of
cognitive impairment in humans and a known
cause of autism that affects about 1 in
4,000 individuals worldwide.
"We were shocked that the two genes work in what appears to
be the same pathway,” says Jongens. The
outward characteristics of the Fragile X fly
model are loss of courtship activity and
memory. In earlier studies, the same
research team had found that lithium and
mGluR antagonists also restored normal
courting behavior and memory in Fragile X
flies. This is what led Jongens and his
colleagues to test lithium and mGluR
antagonists on the FAD-mutated fruit flies.
Eight years ago, studies outside of Penn using a mouse
model proposed that Fragile X patients have
a tendency to have weakened synaptic
connections (sites used for neuron to neuron
communication) more readily than the general
population. This weakening is due to
increased activity in the mGluR. In turn,
this increased activity compromises
neurotransmission for memory-associated
functions.
These results led to the “The mGluR Theory of Fragile X,”
first proposed by Dr. Mark Bear at MIT and
his coauthors. This theory proposed that the
underlying cause of the cognitive impairment
and many of the other symptoms associated
with Fragile X Syndrome were due to enhanced
metabotropic glutamate receptor signaling.
Jongens, McBride, and colleagues tested if mGluR
overactivity might be at the root of many of
phenotypes associated with their fly Fragile
X model. In 2005, the team reported that
treatment of fragile X flies with drugs such
as lithium or mGluR antagonists restored
normal courtship behavior and memory in
their mutant flies and rescued some neuronal
structural defects, as well. The group used
lithium because it is known to have
activities analogous to blocking mGluR-receptor
activity, and it is already an FDA-approved
drug used to treat other ailments in humans
such as bipolar disorder.
A Potential Link to Calcium
Back in the Alzheimer’s fly model, the team
surmised that if they could rescue mutated
flies with lithium or mGluR antagonists,
that pathways downstream of mGluR might also
be useful targets for rescuing age-related
cognitive impairments. One pathway they
investigated was the regulation of the
inositol trisphosphate receptor (InsP3R),
which releases calcium from internal stores
into the cytoplasm of the cell.
They focused on this pathway because previous studies have
found elevated calcium levels in the cells
of Alzheimer’s patients and more recently
Dr. Kevin Foskett and his colleagues, also
at Penn, had found that FAD mutations of
presenilin make InsP3R more responsive to
the signal that stimulates it to release
calcium in the cytoplasm. (In normal
situations, presenilin functions to cleave
several transmembrane proteins, including
the APP protein, which can -peptide found in
the plaques of Alzheimer’s patients.)bproduce
the A
Jongens, McBride and their colleagues found that genetic
reduction of the InsP3R pathway also
prevented the age-related loss of learning
and memory in the FAD fly model.
"The release of calcium from internal cellular stores
during the cellular encoding of memory seems
to be finely tuned so that either too much
or too little calcium release could impair
memory formation,” notes McBride.
“Our next steps will involve validating results in a
relevant mouse model of FAD or AD, as well
as exploring the underlying basis for this
new found connection between Fragile X
Syndrome and Alzheimer’s disease,” says
Jongens. “It is intriguing that the drugs
being developed for the treatment of Fragile
X might also be useful in the treatment of
another disease affecting cognition, namely
Alzheimer’s disease.”
This work was supported by the FRAXA Research Foundation,
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the
American Health Assistance Foundation as
well as Autism Speaks and The National
Fragile X Foundation.