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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: alzheimer + neuronal + memory  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 79 for alzheimer neuronal memory. (0.16 seconds) 
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Internet searching stimulates brain, study says
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - Nov 29, 2008
It's too early to conclude that technology will help vanquish Alzheimer's disease, but "our study shows that when your brain is on Google, your neural ...
Study finds Internet searches boost brain
United Press International - Nov 30, 2008
30 (UPI) -- Searching the Internet exercises the brains of older people by activating their neural circuitry, says UCLA's Memory & Aging Research Center. ...

ABC News
How to prevent Alzheimer?s disease ? part 1
Food Consumer, IL - Nov 21, 2008
Tau proteins prevent proper neuron functioning and amyloid-beta is associated with the formation of plaques in the brains of Alzheimer's patients. ...
Ginkgo biloba Extract and Preventing Alzheimer Disease Journal of American Medical Association (subscription)
all 559 news articles »
Google is good for your noodle
Inquirer, UK -
Although psychiatrist and director of UCLA's Memory & Aging Research Centre, Gary Small says it?s too soon to tell if Google searches could eradicate ...GOOG
As the Worm Turns: Discovering of a Life of Discovery
Washington and Lee University News Office, VA -
Moreover, the complete neuronal connectivity of this animal has been determined and diagrammed by electron microscopy. Despite its simplicity, this nematode ...

World Science
?Super-aged? brains reveal secrets of sharp old-age memory
World Science, NY - Nov 17, 2008
When this happens, the microtubules disintegrate, collapsing the neuron's transport system. This may result first in communication malfunctions between ...
Full Text (HTML)
Science Magazine (subscription) - Nov 27, 2008
Morimoto discussed stress's effects at the molecular level and its implications for neurodegenerative disorders such as Huntington's and Alzheimer's disease ...
FDA Finds Fast Food, MSG and Aspartame Cause Alzheimer's
The Spoof (satire), UK - Nov 29, 2008
"Upon examining the brains of these people, we found neural degeneration just like that found in the Alzheimer brain," said Ralph Roachman, head of the FDA. ...
Not as easy as it may seem
MIT News, MA - Nov 21, 2008
"Our results suggest that any attempts of neuronal replacement employing stem cells would likely need to address the issue of how the connections formed by ...
OTCPicks.com Stocks to Watch for Wednesday, November 26th MEMY ...
Emailwire - Nov 26, 2008
The company's products include MEM 1003, a neuronal L-type calcium channel modulator that is in phase II clinical trials for the treatment of Alzheimer's ...
OTCPicks.com: OTCPicks.com Daily Market Movers Digest Midday ... Trading Markets (press release)
all 7 news articles »  MEMY - CSUN - CHRS
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: memory loss + help + alzheimers  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Surprising Things That Affect Memory
Forbes, NY - Aug 5, 2008
"Most people feel that they are victims when it comes to Alzheimer's and memory loss," says Dr. Vincent Fortanasce, author of the new book The ...
Brain Aerobics Could Be Key to Famous Heart Doctor?s Longevity ...
Free Press Release Center (press release), Canada -
A diligent course of brain exercises, such as reading and writing everyday, is paramount to staving off age-related memory loss and Alzheimer?s disease. ...

Daily Mail
Three oily fish meals a week can cut memory loss by 25pc
Daily Mail, UK - Aug 5, 2008
Researcher Jyrki Virtanen, of the University of Kuopio in Finland, said: 'While eating tuna and other types of fish seems to help protect against memory ...
Oily fish can protect brain function Telegraph.co.uk
Eating Fish May Prevent Memory Loss and Stroke in Old Age Newswise (press release)
all 92 news articles »
New chemical may help scan brain for signs of Alzheimer?s
Schenectady Gazette, NY - Aug 5, 2008
Ideally, Holub said patients with mild memory loss would have a baseline scan, be treated with the drugs approved to treat Alzheimer?s disease, ...
Innovative Alzheimer's medications offer hope
Connecticut Post, CT -
These were the original changes found under the microscope in 1901 by Alois Alzheimer when he described the memory loss now bearing his name. ...
Embracing Memory Loss to Give Hope To Millions
NewDesignWorld (press release), UK - Aug 5, 2008
Waterbury, CT -- Millions of Americans live with or have a loved one with Alzheimer?s disease or other memory-impairing conditions. To better understand and ...
Can hypnosis help to slow dementia?
Craegmoor News, UK -
"Alzheimer's Society research is calling for mandatory specialist dementia training to help empower staff and ensure everyone gets access to a high standard ...

NHS Choices
Oily fish and memory
NHS Choices, UK -
?Three oily fish meals a week can cut memory loss by 25%?, reported the Daily Mail. It said researchers found that eating oily fish (baked or steamed, ...

Oneindia
Statins May Protect Against Memory Loss
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 28, 2008
Earlier landmark findings by Haan's group of the same study cohort established that certain metabolic and vascular disorders predicted Alzheimer's and ...
Statins Help Reduce Risk Of Developing Dementia, Memory Loss ChattahBox
Statins Lower Risk of Dementia and Memory Loss eMaxHealth.com
Statins Diminish The Risk Of Memory Loss, Study Shows Enews 2.0
FOX 9 News - dBTechno
all 79 news articles »

Chatter Shmatter
Can Statins Reduce Risk of Memory Loss?
WebMD - Jul 28, 2008
Haan's study is not the first to suggest that statins protect older people against memory loss and other types of mental decline, but it is one of the first ...
Statins may protect against memory loss: study Reuters
Statins May Protect Against Memory Loss Newswise (press release)
Statins 'may cut dementia risk' BBC News
Science News - Pharmalot
all 107 news articles »
Source: Google News

A beta peptide vaccination prevents memory loss in an animal model of Alzheimer's disease. -
D Morgan, DM Diamond, PE Gottschall, KE Ugen, C … - Nature, 2000 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... A beta peptide vaccination prevents memory loss in an animal model of
Alzheimer's disease. Morgan D, Diamond DM, Gottschall PE, Ugen ...

… : Presence of oligomeric A ligands (ADDLs) suggests a molecular basis for reversible memory loss -
Y Gong, L Chang, KL Viola, PN Lacor, MP Lambert, … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003 - National Acad Sciences
... have been linked to synapse loss and reversible ... the exciting possibility that human
memory function in AD ... of Northwestern University for his help with confocal ...

Differential patterns of memory loss among patients with Alzheimer's disease, Huntington's disease, … -
MB Moss, MS Albert, N Butters, M Payne - Archives of Neurology, 1986 - Am Med Assoc
... Differential patterns of memory loss among patients with ... in Urinary Cortisol Excretion
and Memory Declines: MacArthur ... report Moss AM J ALZHEIMERS DIS OTHER ...

Reversible Memory Loss in a Mouse Transgenic Model of Alzheimer's Disease -
LA Kotilinek, B Bacskai, M Westerman, T … - Journal of Neuroscience, 2002 - neuroscience.org
... suggests a common mechanism for memory loss in transgenic ... a Pioneer Award from the
Alzheimer's Association (BTH ... Eugene Gnida for technical help performing ELISAs ...

Pathways towards and away from Alzheimer's disease -
MP Mattson - Nature, 2004 - nature.com
... C. Will a healthy lifestyle help prevent Alzheimer's ... with amyloid-beta attenuates
Alzheimer-disease-like ... Reversible memory loss in a mouse transgenic model of ...

Priming and semantic memory loss in Alzheimer's disease. -
H Chertkow, D Bub, M Seidenberg - Brain Lang, 1989 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Brain Lang. 1989 Apr;36(3):420-46. Priming and semantic memory loss in Alzheimer's
disease. Chertkow H, Bub D, Seidenberg M. Department ...

Mild Cognitive Impairments Predict Dementia in Nondemented Elderly Patients With Memory Loss -
A Bozoki, B Giordani, JL Heidebrink, S Berent, NL … - Archives of Neurology, 2001 - Am Med Assoc
... symptoms are often a precursor to Alzheimer disease (AD ... in addition to memory would
help identify those ... Of the 48 nondemented patients with memory loss, 17 met M ...

Role of estrogen replacement therapy in memory enhancement and the prevention of neuronal loss -
JW Simpkins, PS Green, KE Gridley, M Singh, NC de … - Am J Med, 1997 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Role of estrogen replacement therapy in memory enhancement and the prevention
of neuronal loss associated with Alzheimer's disease. ...

Prediction of probable Alzheimer's disease in memory-impaired patients: A prospective longitudinal … -
MC Tierney - Neurology, 1996 - AAN Enterprises
... Predict Dementia in Nondemented Elderly Patients With Memory Loss Arch Neurol ... L.
Berg Mild Cognitive Impairment Represents Early-Stage Alzheimer Disease Arch ...

Semantic memory loss in dementia of Alzheimer?s type. What do various measures measure -
H Chertkow, D Bub - Brain, 1990 - Oxford Univ Press
... University Press. ARTICLES. Semantic memory loss in dementia of Alzheimer's
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Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Neuronal receptor response may help explain Alzheimer's memory loss

Researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center have a new theory as to why people with Alzheimer's disease have trouble performing even the simplest memory tasks.
That's because they discovered a physical link between apolipoprotein E ( APOE ), the transport molecules known to play a role in development of the disease, and glutamate, a brain chemical necessary for establishing human memory.

In a study published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, the research team specifically found that receptors on the outside of brain nerve cells that bind on to APOE and glutamate are connected on the surface of neurons, separated from each other by only a small protein.

While the researchers don't know why these receptors are linked together, they say inefficient or higher-than-average levels of APOE in the brain could possibly be clogging these binding sites, preventing glutamate from activating the processes necessary to form memories.

" We have found out that two receptors previously thought to have nothing to do with each other do, in fact, interact, leading us to conclude that APOE affects the NMDA glutamate channel that is important in memory," says the study's senior author, G. William Rebeck, at Georgetown's Biomedical Graduate Research Organization.

The researchers also hypothesize that this interaction might have something to do with development of Alzheimer's disease, although they stress that at this early stage of research, this is impossible to prove.

Rebeck and first author Hyang-Sook Hoe, also of Georgetown, say that laboratory work now underway is attempting to unravel the relationship between APOE and NMDA receptors.

APOE is a protein that helps shuttle cholesterol and other non-soluble lipid particles around the body, moving these substances to where they are needed. All cells have receptors that bind on to APOE so that they can use lipids as needed, such as for quick energy, to store as fat for later use, or to repair wounds.

But researchers now know that APOE does more than distribute lipids, especially in the brain. About a decade ago, scientists linked APOE4, one of the three common forms of APOE, to development of Alzheimer's disease, although the biological link between the protein and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's is not clear.

Based on recent research, Rebeck and others suspect that, in the brain, APOE also acts as a transporter, picking up lipids and perhaps other material that result from normal brain tissue wear and tear, or from trauma, and moving it to where it can be used or can be cleared away from the brain. Work in Rebeck's lab found that APOE receptor 2 ( ApoEr2 ), one of the eight different APOE receptor types, is crucial to both the development and operation of a normal brain.

Glutamate increases the strength of a synaptic response following stimulation. The NMDA glutamate receptor binds on to the drug NMDA, and also on to glutamate, an excitatory neurotransmitter that also stimulates nerve cell activity. Researchers know that the NMDA receptor is needed to produce the long-lasting synaptic response that is necessary in order to establish, or "lay down," memory, Rebeck says. " The molecular basis of memory depends on NMDA receptor. "

In work leading up to this study, Rebeck and the research team found that adding APOE to neurons in laboratory culture blocked NMDA receptors.
In this study, they confirmed through a series of experiments that the receptors for APOE and NMDA interacted, and that the protein that linked the two was PSD95, often found in neural synaptic junctions. Together, they form a multiprotein complex that could presumably be activated by either APOE, NMDA or glutamate.

Rebeck suspects that the APOE4 variant -- the one linked to Alzheimer's disease -- is less efficient at removing lipid debris in the brain than is APOE2 or APOE3, and because of this, brain cells secrete more of the faulty protein to do the job. If too much APOE ends up binding to the APOE/NMDA receptor, one of two things could possibly happen, Rebeck says. In one scenario, the receptor becomes over-stimulated due to the accumulating presence of APOE, which could trigger a process called excitotoxicity that results in death of the neruons. Or, in the presence of damage and secreted APOE, the receptor "turns down" its activity -- thus, hampering memory formation -- until the brain is repaired. " Having damage around tells the brain not to think too much for awhile, " Rebeck says. But if APOE4 cannot clear up accumulating damage, the ability to make new memories, and use old ones, may be increasingly lost.

" This is, of course, speculation, but now we have new avenues in which we can explore the molecular basis of memory and possibly Alzheimer's disease," Rebeck says.

Source: Georgetown University Medical Center, 2006

 
 
 
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