Parkinson’s disease stopped in animal model: Molecular ‘tweezers’ break up toxic aggregations of proteins

ScienceDaily (Mar. 2, 2012) Millions of people suffer from Parkinson’s disease, a disorder of the nervous system that affects movement and worsens over time. As the world’s population ages, it’s estimated that the number of people with the disease will rise sharply. Yet despite several effective therapies that treat Parkinson’s symptoms, nothing slows its progression.

While it’s not known what exactly causes the disease, evidence points to one particular culprit: a protein called -synuclein. The protein, which has been found to be common to all patients with Parkinson’s, is thought to be a pathway to the disease when it binds together in “clumps,” or aggregates, and becomes toxic, killing the brain’s neurons.

Now, scientists at UCLA have found a way to prevent these clumps from forming, prevent their toxicity and even break up existing aggregates.

UCLA professor of neurology Jeff Bronstein and UCLA associate professor of neurology Gal Bitan, along with their colleagues, report the development of a novel compound known as a “molecular tweezer,” which in a living animal model blocked -synuclein aggregates from forming, stopped the aggregates’ toxicity and, further, reversed aggregates in the brain that had already formed. And the tweezers accomplished this without interfering with normal brain function.

The research appears in the current online edition of the journal Neurotherapeutics.

There are currently more than 30 diseases with no cure that are caused by protein aggregation and the resulting toxicity to the brain or other organs, including Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and Type 2 diabetes. It is therefore critical, Bronstein said, to find a way to stop this aggregation process. Over the last two decades, researchers and pharmaceutical companies have attempted to develop drugs that would prevent abnormal protein aggregation, but so far, they have had little or no success.

While these aggregates are a natural target for a drug, finding a therapy that targets only the aggregates is a complicated process, Bronstein said. In Parkinson’s, for example, the protein implicated in the disorder, -synuclein, is naturally ubiquitous throughout the brain.

“Its normal function is not well understood, but it may play a role in aiding communication between neurons,” Bronstein said. “The trick, then, is to prevent the -synuclein protein aggregates and their toxicity without destroying -synuclein’s normal function, along with, of course, other healthy areas of the brain.

Molecular tweezer

Bronstein collaborated with Bitan, who had been working with a particular molecular tweezer he had developed called CLR01. Molecular tweezers are complex molecular compounds that are capable of binding to other proteins. Shaped like the letter “C,” these compounds wrap around chains of lysine, a basic amino acid that is a constituent of most proteins.

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Gazette.Net: National Multiple Sclerosis Society names Frederick Walk MS Ambassador

Sarah Reynolds, of Frederick, has been named Fredericks ambassador for the Walk MS fundraiser for multiple sclerosis on April 14.

Reynolds mother was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) a debilitating autoimmune disease of the central nervous system more than 20 years ago, according to a news release.

Since 1990, Reynolds has been the motivator, organizer and team captain of Frederick Walk MS Team Della. Each year she asks family and friends to raise money to support the National MS Society and encouraging more people to participate.

At the walk, she will share her story with about 700 walk participants. Walk MS in Frederick takes place at 9 a.m. on April 14 at Harry Grove Stadium, 21 Stadium Drive Frederick. To register, visit http://www.walkmsmaryland.org or call 1-800-FIGHT-MS.

Symptoms of the disease range from reduced or lost mobility to numbness and tingling to blindness and paralysis. The progress, severity and specific symptoms of MS in any one person cannot yet be predicted. Most people with MS are diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 50, with at least two to three times more women than men being diagnosed with the disease. MS affects more than 400,000 people in the U.S., and 2.1 million worldwide.

The National Multiple Sclerosis Society addresses the challenges of each person affected by MS by funding research, advocacy, professional education, collaboration with MS organizations and programs and services designed to help people with MS and their families. To learn more about multiple sclerosis and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society visit http://www.nationalMSsociety.org.

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From monkeys to medication: New research into helping people with MS

More than 400,000 Americans are living with Multiple Sclerosis, a chronic, unpredictable disease that attacks the central nervous system.

Now, new discoveries could help scientists come up with better treatments for the disease and even prevent its onset.

Whether parachuting, fishing, or enjoying the beach, Susan Dobroff has always pictured herself as an outdoors woman.

Susan Dobroff, Living with MS, explains why she enjoys the outdoors so much, “It’s like being in touch with God.”

Not even Multiple Sclerosis could dampen her active lifestyle. Two years after being diagnosed, she started law school.

Dobroff explains how she decided to go to law school, “I realized, you know, you’ve been thinking about going to law school for a long time so got to do it sooner rather than later.”

10 years after her diagnosis, Susan began to lose her ability to walk. Eventually, her legal career came to a grinding halt, too.

Dobroff explains how she struggle after awhile with her job, “Lawyers don’t need to walk and run in order to practice law but we do have to think.”

Now Japanese Macaques could hold the key to helping people like Susan. Scientists at the Oregon National Primate Center have discovered a new herpes virus in monkeys that causes an MS like disease in Macaques.

These brain lesions are a classic indicator of inflammation in people with MS. The discovery could help scientists solve how the disease develops and stop its onset.

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Shine a light on autism in April

On Monday, April 2, families and friends of people who are impacted by autism will join together in front of Clock Tower Place in Maynard to watch the town clock turn blue to raise awareness of Autism in the community.

Adding itself to the list of international landmarks including the Sydney Opera House, Empire State Building and many more, Clock Towers blue lights will be a symbol that Maynard supports our community members who are impacted by autism, a complex neurobiological disorder that inhibits a person’s ability to communicate and develop social relationships, and is often accompanied by behavioral challenges.

Light It Up Blue is an international campaign created by the organization Autism Speaks.

Jae Mannion, a student at Fowler School and who has Aspergers Syndome, a type of autism, organized the Maynard event. Jae has made collection tins to raise money to pay for the plastic tube covers for the 48 lights, which light the clock every evening. The cost of the tubing is $284. Kevin Whalen, owner of Stow Ace Hardware, has helped support Jae in his efforts. Kevin and his wife Melissa, have a son, Ty, who has a severe form of autism.

According to the group, Autism Speaks, autism spectrum disorders are diagnosed in one in 110 children; one in 70 boys in the United States, affecting four times as many boys as girls. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have called autism a national public health crisis whose cause and cure remain unknown. The mission of Autism Speaks is to change the future for all who struggle with autism spectrum disorders. The organization is dedicated to funding global biomedical research into the causes, prevention, treatments, and cure for autism; to raising public awareness about autism and its effects on individuals, families, and society; and to bringing hope to all who deal with the hardships of this disorder.

The community is invited to watch the clock turn blue at 7 p.m., Monday April 2 in front of Clock Tower Place. Anyone can Light It Up Blue by purchasing a blue light for their home at Stow Ace Hardware. Maynard and Stow students are encouraged to wear blue to school on April 2.

For more information visit lightitupblue.org or email Danielle Mannion at dmannion@millisps.org.

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Keystone Villa at Douglassville holds Dementia seminar

Keystone Villa at Douglassville held its third of a four-part, free educational series, Caregiver Techniques in Helping with Dementia Care on Wednesday, Feb. 22. Attendees learned different caregiver techniques that would help a person with dementia complete tasks with declining physical, mental and verbal abilities. Alison Sprankle, training specialist and care manager of Good News Consulting, Inc., discussed different life skill methods that can be used to help your loved one.

Sprankle said that no matter what level of dementia, people want to maintain their independence as much as possible. She said it becomes too easy to do too much for them and then it becomes a battle of the wills. To make daily routines easier, she recommends giving options for them to decide for themselves. Sprankle said it does not matter if the outfit they choose clashes, what counts is that they feel self-sufficient.

Because of frustration and declining abilities, a person with dementia might not cooperate and become difficult when asked to do something like eat or brush his or her teeth. The Hand Under Hand technique allows them to feel like they are still doing the task themselves while being guided along.

If he or she is right handed, you sit or stand to the right, slide your hand under their hand palm up and clasp their hand as though you are about to arm wrestle. You get a little behind them and tuck your arm under their arm. In this position, you now have full use of your fingers to hold an object and move their arm up or down or in or out.

In this position, you can hold a utensil, get food and bring it up to their mouth to eat. You can accomplish things like comb their hair or brush their teeth. With this non-invasive help, they feel like they are successfully participating and will cooperate. If the person is left handed, you stand to their left side and do the same thing with your left hand.

Being stubborn and refusing to eat can become a huge challenge for the caregiver. Other methods that help with dining are simplifying utensils, cups and food presentation by using contrasting colors in table settings to help with attention span, minimizing distracting noise, playing calming instrumental music, and having one-on-one conversations.

If you notice sputtering, coughing or chewing problems while eating, contact your doctor and ask for a speech evaluation to determine if a change is needed in food texture and/or liquid consistency.

Bathing can also be difficult to accomplish as the disease progresses. A few simple techniques could defuse a situation from becoming a behavioral trigger. Dont make a person take a shower when they have been a bath taker all their life. Determine what time of day they prefer personal hygiene. Collect all of the supplies you need in advance before you begin. Let them get bathed in a loose fitting cover-up so their dignity is maintained. Warm the room and towels. Minimize noise, distractions and clutter. If they really dont like water on their body anymore, try a waterless shampoo or soap product. They can be found online or at many stores that sell camping products like Cabelas or Dicks Sporting Goods.

No matter what you are trying to accomplish as the caregiver, keep the activity positive. Start carefully and slowly, go step-by-step and provide encouraging feedback all the way.

Keystone Villa at Douglassville invites the community to attend the conclusion of this series on Wednesday, March 21, 6 to 7:30 p.m., with Successful Engagement with Those Who Have Dementia. Continued…

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March is Multiple Sclerosis Awareness Month

CHERRY HILL, N.J., March 2, 2012 /PRNewswire/ –The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America (MSAA) is pleased to recognize March as MS Awareness Month. During the month of March, MSAA will be highlighting various programs designed to expand knowledge, understanding, and support of individuals whose lives are affected by multiple sclerosis (MS). Such program offerings include:

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20110615/PH20696LOGO )

The Multiple Sclerosis Association of America (MSAA) is a national, nonprofit organization dedicated to enriching the quality of life for everyone affected by multiple sclerosis. MSAA provides vital programs and services, such as: a toll-free Helpline; informative publications including a magazine, The Motivator; website featuring educational videos and research updates; S.E.A.R.C.H. program to assist the MS community with learning about different treatment choices; equipment distribution ranging from grab bars to wheelchairs; cooling accessories for heat-sensitive individuals; a mobile phone app, My MS Manager; educational events and activities; MRI funding and insurance advocacy; and more. For additional information, please visit http://www.msassociation.org or call (800) 532-7667.

The most common neurological disorder diagnosed in young adults, multiple sclerosis is an autoimmune disease of the central nervous system. This disorder damages or destroys the protective covering (known as myelin) surrounding the nerves, causing reduced communication between the brain and nerve pathways. Common symptoms include visual problems, overwhelming fatigue, difficulty with balance and coordination, and various levels of impaired mobility. MS is not contagious or fatal.

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Autism Is Jim Calhoun’s Biggest Opponent

Jim Calhoun, like many coaches, is superstitious. He might have a lucky tie or piece of jewelry he must wear to end a losing streak, or keep a winning streak going.

But one item that remains in good times and bad is the blue puzzle piece he wears on the lapel of his suit jacket. The symbol for Autism Speaks, like the cause itself, remains close to his heart at all times.

“He has never taken it off,” Jeff Calhoun said. “I can’t tell you how many people who have mentioned it to me parents, families touched by autism, who tell me how much it means to them. He is very passionate about it. Just by lending his name and reaching out to people, he has done more than we could ever ask.”

Said Amy Calhoun: “When I see that blue pin on his lapel, it sometimes brings tears to my eyes. He is taking this on for Reese.”

The cause is a personal one for the Calhoun family. Jeff and Amy’s daughter, Reese, now 8, was diagnosed at 2, and her grandfather’s involvement with the advocacy group Autism Speaks is very deep.

But because he is scheduled to undergo back surgery on Monday in New York, Calhoun will not be able to participate in an event he has helped launch “CardioRaiser: Workout for Autism Speaks” at Cardio Express in Manchester and Southington from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sunday. Farmington Bank is the presenting sponsor.

“It’s just so important to raise awareness,” Jeff Calhoun said, “because autism, anything that involves the brain, is something we don’t talk about much as a society. We want to share our story, and hope it lets people know they are not alone.”

Hundreds are expected to participate, and the event is expected to raise at least $100,000 for the Connecticut chapter of Autism Speaks. Participants may choose from a variety of exercise activities to help in the cause. Although Jim Calhoun cannot be there, some of his assistants are expected to stop by the morning after UConn plays Syracuse (Saturday night at 9 p.m.). Panera Bread will provide breakfast for participants.

The event will become an annual one, Jeff Calhoun said.

“I am deeply committed to the cause of helping families confronting the many challenges of autism,” Jim Calhoun said in January, when the event was scheduled. “It is my hope that this event will bring Connecticut families together to raise dollars so important to all those facing this complex neurobiological disorder.”

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Toys"R"Us®, Canada helps "Shine A Light For Autism" during third annual fundraising campaign to benefit Autism Speaks …

Campaign Focuses On How Families Can “Light It Up Blue” To Raise Autism Awareness Across Canada

TORONTO, March 1, 2012 /CNW/ – Toys”R”Us, Canada today announced the launch of its in-store and online fundraising campaign to benefit Autism Speaks, North America’s largest autism science and advocacy organization. Now through Monday, April 30, Toys”R”Us and Babies”R”Us stores will offer customers an Autism Speaks puzzle piece in exchange for a $1 donation. Monetary donations will be collected at all 73 stores (including Express locations) across the country and online at Toysrus.ca. The company is heightening its focus on autism awareness, unveiling a new theme for the 2012 campaign, “Shine A Light For Autism.”

“With so many children affected by autism and not enough known about causes or cures, we hope that our fundraising and awareness campaigns can contribute to solving the autism puzzle,” said Kevin Macnab, President, Toys”R”Us Canada. “Through our ongoing partnership, the “R”Us family remains committed to helping Autism Speaks and the critical work they do in supporting families affected by autism spectrum disorders.”

Shining A Light For Autism In-store and online

During the campaign, customers can contribute a cash donation at all Toys”R”Us and Babies”R”Us locations, including Express locations, and online at Toysrus.ca.

In-store signage displayed in Toys”R”Us and Babies”R”Us stores across the country feature children with autism dressed as super-heroes, with the Autism Speaks puzzle piece logo as their powerful emblem. The puzzle pieces are bursting with light, while inspiring everyone to donate to the cause by looking to the hero within.

“Toys”R”Us and Babies”R”Us stores across Canada are in a unique position to reach numerous parents daily, providing important awareness information about autism in their stores, as well as online,” said Suzanne Lanthier, Executive Director of Autism Speaks Canada. “We are thrilled to bring hope to families who live with the realities of autism every day, through ongoing support in our research and advocacy efforts.”

Toysrus.ca also serves as a resource for parents, caregivers, families and friends of children with autism. Visitors can find a list of “Ten Toys That Speak To Autism,” which provides toy suggestions to help guide anyone purchasing toys for a child with autism.

Walking To Benefit Autism Speaks

In conjunction with the campaign, the company is also kicking off its national sponsorship of Walk Now for Autism Speaks, a year-long series of more than 85 walk events taking place throughout North America. Toys”R”Us and Babies”R”Us employees will walk alongside the company’s iconic mascot, Geoffrey the Giraffe, as well as individuals with autism, their families and friends to raise money and awareness for the cause. All funds raised through the Walk Now for Autism Speaks events will go directly to Autism Speaks to support research awareness and family services programs in Canada.

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Order your Autism Awareness shirts now

Order your Choose Blue shirts to support World Autism Awareness Month (April). Short-sleeve shirts are only $10 and long-sleeve shirts are $15. Join the Choose Blue campaign and order a blue shirt to wear during the month of April. Payment and order forms are due to Faith, Hope & Charity no later than Thursday, March 8th. The Choose Blue Shirts will be available for pick-up at Faith, Hope & Charity on Friday, March 30th.

“Choose Blue: For Autism Awareness and Advocacy” during World Autism Awareness Month in April. Storm Lake is Choosing Blue as part of Autism Speaks’ Light It Up Blue campaign to educate people on the disorder. Autism Speaks is an organization whose mission is to change the future for all who struggle with Autism Spectrum Disorders.

For the second year, Faith, Hope & Charity has teamed up with the Riesenberg family, and Storm Lake Radio to promote for Autism Awareness in the community. Knowing how hard it is for an outsider to relate to Autism, as well the pain-staking process of finding information and treatment options, these groups want to make a difference in the community.

With the Autism rates on the rise (Autism affects 1 in 110 children and 1 in 70 boys, autismspeaks.org), more parents than ever will receive the news, “Your child has Autism.” Through projects like Choose Blue, Light It Up Blue and the Iowa Walk Now for Autism Speaks, parents will have a support system and be able to easily identify the information and tools to raise a child with Autism.

By increasing awareness and highlighting resources provided within the community as well as by Autism Speaks, children affected by Autism (and their families) can receive the help they need sooner. With the support of the community and families, we can change the future … Autism does not have to be a silent disease. Please join Faith, Hope & Charity, the Riesenberg family, and Storm Lake Radio as they Choose Blue: For Autism Awareness and Advocacy during the month of April.

On April 20th, FHC will host an Autism Awareness Walk with a blue balloon release to kick it off at 5:15 p.m. Families, friends and other supporters are invited to come to Faith, Hope & Charity to walk around our campus to promote Autism Awareness. Following the conclusion of the walk (6 p.m.), participants are encouraged to head to Lake Avenue Lounge (downtown Storm Lake) for a fundraising meal (starting at 6 p.m.) — complete with live entertainment.

For more resources please visit faithhopeandcharity.org, autismspeaks.org, or lightitupblue.org. And, for more information on Choose Blue: For Autism Awareness and Advocacy plans contact Stephanie Beck at Faith, Hope & Charity at 712-732-5127, ext. 102 or stephanie@faithhopeandcharity.org.

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Autism groups to merge

The local nonprofit groups Life Skills for adults with developmental disabilities and TouchPoint Autism Services will merge their organizations as of July 1 to support a growing number of adults with autism.

The new organization will be known as Life Skills, and TouchPoint (formerly the Judevine Center for Autism) will still be used to refer to autism services.

“As these children who are diagnosed with autism are aging, we really wanted to be prepared to meet that need,” said Wendy Sullivan, CEO of the new organization.

Parents can be “confident you can stay with this organization through the child’s lifetime,” Sullivan said.

Life Skills provides 24-hour assistance including in-home care, job training and placement to teenagers and adults with Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, autism and other developmental disabilities. TouchPoint Autism Services offers early intervention services, behavior therapy, parent training and employment services through seven offices in Missouri. Both groups, which have offices in west St. Louis County, are United Way member agencies.

The organization will have a combined 1,200 employees. There are no immediate plans for layoffs or eliminating positions, Sullivan said.

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Redefining Autism: Proposal Worries Many Parents

When Caleb Geary was diagnosed with autism at age 3, he had never spoken or eaten solid food.

Now 6, the boy speaks and tests at his first-grade level progress that his parents attribute to insurance-based services at home and intensive behavioral intervention at the boy’s school in Hamden.

But they worry what will happen to Caleb’s diagnosis and the services that have come with it if the American Psychiatry Association’s proposal to change the definition of autism is adopted.

Lori Geary said she has already fought to get her son the help he needs. Tom Zwicker, Caleb’s father and the director of an autism center for the Easter Seals of Coastal Fairfield County, said he believes insurance companies will start requesting annual diagnostic evaluations if the definition is revised. As a result, his son and many other children will lose out on services to treat their conditions.

“You have an entire group receiving services that would be left out in the cold,” said Zwicker, who lives in Branford. “We’re going to lose a whole generation of children.”

The autism community has been embroiled in a heated debate for the past few weeks over the proposal to dramatically change the criteria for autism diagnosis in the upcoming fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The DSM-5, scheduled to be published in 2013, is the first revision since 1994.

The revision would create an umbrella category known as “autism spectrum disorder” that would include traditional autism, as well as Asperger’s Syndrome, childhood disintegrative disorder and pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified (PDD-NOS) which currently are considered separate disorders. A new category, social communication disorder, would also be created.

“What became very apparent is that there aren’t clear boundaries, and that they really are all on a spectrum,” said Darrell Regier, director of research for the APA. The current criteria, he said, is “fuzzy” and as a result some people have been mislabeled as autistic, while others who need treatment can’t get it because their symptoms don’t match the current criteria.

“The thing that we tried to do is be a little more clear about the different deficits that these people have,” Regier said.

But some experts worry that the revision’s main effect will be to drastically reduce the number of people who are diagnosed with autism and who now qualify for services to treat it.

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The 27th Colloque Médecine et Recherche of the Fondation Ipsen in the Alzheimer Disease series: “Proteopathic Seeds …

PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

In the mid 1980s, Stanley Prusiner startled the scientific world by claiming that transmissible neurodegenerative diseases such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob in humans and Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE; mad cow disease) were caused by self-replicating protein molecules, which he named prions. Painstaking work to establish that prion proteins could replicate without the need for genetic material won him the Nobel prize in 1997. What at first seemed an unusual mechanism restricted to a rather rare group of diseases has now become central to the study of all neurodegenerative conditions: the pathogenic proteins that characterise these diseases all seem to behave like prions. The implications for understanding how these diseases are transmitted through the nervous system and the possibility that environmental contamination may account for the sporadic forms of these diseases, as well as therapeutic possibilities, were among the topics discussed by the thirteen international experts, including two Nobel Prize winners, at the 27th annual colloquium on Alzheimers disease, hosted by the Fondation IPSEN. The meeting, hold in Paris on February 27, 2012, has been organized by Mathias Jucker (University of Tbingen, Germany) and Yves Christen (Fondation IPSEN, Paris).

Prions are Janus-like proteins synthesised by neurons: in their normal, globular conformation they participate in cellular functions but in certain circumstances they adopt a pleated -sheet configuration, which forms insoluble fibrous aggregates that disrupt cell function. This aggregated form is found in neurons in a group of neurodegenerative diseases known as the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, which include Kuru, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans, BSE in cattle and scrapie in sheep. All of these diseases can be transmitted by contact with brain material from affected individuals the cause of great concern in the late 1980s and early 1990s when people developed a form of CJD after eating products from cows with BSE.

By the 1980s, a long hunt had failed to find either a bacterial or viral agent causing these diseases. Stanley Prusiner and his colleagues proposed instead that the infectious agent was the -sheet form of the prion protein, which was able to replicate using itself as a template. As the first claim for replication without the need for nucleic acids, this was to say the least controversial. Now it is well accepted that rogue molecules in the -sheet conformation, now known as prions, can act as a seed, converting normal prion proteins into -sheet type molecules. These adopt a fibrillar configuration and aggregate into an amyloid-like deposit that disrupts the neurons function. Prions released from cells are taken up by neighbours and trigger the same cascade of transformation and aggregation. Genetics still plays a part, because various mutations in the prion protein gene promote this transformation, while some polymorphisms (substitution of one base in the gene sequence for another) make individuals more susceptible to developing a prion disease.

The parallels with Alzheimers disease (AD) were soon noted: a cellular protein, in this case the amyloid- peptide, adopts a -sheet, fibrillar conformation that aggregates in the brain as amyloid plaques; again genetics plays a part, at least in early-onset, familial AD, which is associated with mutations in amyloid-s parent protein, the amyloid precursor protein. More recently, it has become clear that this prion-like pattern is common to all the neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinsons, Huntingtons and motor neuron disease (Stanley Prusiner, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, USA): each is characterised by a disease-specific cellular protein that transforms into a -sheet configuration that subsequently aggregates. Moreover, mutations associated with familial forms of the diseases have now been identified for all these signature proteins. As a consequence these conditions are now being designated as protein misfolding disorders (Claudio Soto, University of Texas Houston Medical School, Houston, USA) and the proteins responsible could be considered as mammalian prions (Prusiner).

If the misfolded proteins associated with the various neurodegenerative diseases do behave like prions, they should be capable of triggering the transformation of the cellular protein in unaffected cells. Transfer of a systemic (non-neural) amyloidosis between mice was first demonstrated over 40 years ago (Per Westermark, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden). Several speakers at the meeting have presented data supporting this hypothesis for various neurodegenerative diseases, either by injecting a brain homogenate from mice genetically engineered to develop the disease into the brains of susceptible but disease-free animals (Prusiner; Mathias Jucker, Hertie-Institute for Clinical Brain Research and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Tbingen, Germany; Soto; Michel Goedert, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK; Patrik Brundin, Lund University, Lund, Sweden; Virginia Lee, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, USA); by injecting synthetic protein fibrils into brains (Lee); or by testing purified protein extracts on neuron cultures (Anne Bertolotti, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK; Ron Kopito, Stanford University, Stanford, USA). Another clear indication of transcellular induction comes from Parkinsons disease patients who have had stem-cell transplants: -sheet proteins have been found in the neurons derived from the stem cells (Brundin).

This triggering ability of the aberrant proteins, which has gained them the label of proteopathic seeds, also seems to be responsible for the temporal spread of degeneration through the brain that is typical of the neurodegenerative diseases (Jucker; Brundin; Lee). Perhaps more significant, the aberrant proteins have been found in the brain after intra-peritoneal injection or blood transfusion (Soto); as with prions, transport along the vagal nerve seems to be the most likely route into the brain (Prusiner; Brundin). This opens up the possibility of an environmental causation for the many patients with a neurodegenerative disease who do not have hereditary links (Jucker; Soto; Westermark).

The mechanisms underlying proteopathic seeding are still unclear. The spread of the -sheet transformation seems to depend on both the configuration of the seed itself and the genetic constitution of the animal again very like the prion diseases (Jucker; Goedert). The uptake of the seed proteins into neurons is being examined in culture (Bertolotti; Kopito) and model systems (Brundin). The key seems to be in the interaction between the seed protein and cell membranes and, in some cases at least, helper proteins are required (Brundin).

To understand how seeding works, it is essential to know the structure of the -sheet proteins. Taking amyloid- as an example, the conditions that determine what type of fibril and aggregates will form, and how this relates to the mutations in the amyloid precursor protein will be discussed (Robert Tycko, National Institutes of Health, NIDDK, Bethesda, USA). Cooperativity between -sheet molecules may also be important in aggregation (Roland Riek, ETH Zrich, Zrich, Switzerland). Helpful insights can also come from systemic diseases in which amyloid accumulates, such as AA amyloidosis. Amyloid, a generic term for protein aggregates, is in this case produced by the inflammatory protein serum amyloid A (Westermark). There is evidence that AA amyloid formation can be triggered by other types of amyloid molecule, leading to speculation that amyloid fibrils found in the environment and food could cross-seed amyloid formation in the body or brain.

As knowledge about proteopathic seeding accumulates, new prospects for therapeutic intervention open up (Peter Lansbury, Brigham and Womens Hospital, Boston, USA). The initial conversion of functional globular protein into potentially pathogenic -sheet form, the seeding cascade that coverts further globular protein to -sheet, and the mechanisms by which neurons take up prion-like -sheet molecules are all potential targets. The discovery that amyloid- seeds are partly soluble and may be present in body fluids offers a possible alternative strategy for an early diagnostic (Jucker).

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UA scientists to discuss aging

Did you miss the popular "Living Beyond 100" lecture series presented by the University of Arizona's College of Science that concluded this week?

It focused on the effects of the new longevity, addressing topics including the opportunities and costs of long life, the biology of aging, the effects of aging on the brain and regenerative medicine.

For the past several years the science college has sponsored an annual lecture series on contemporary themes with broad interest. This year's six-part series will be repeated beginning Wednesday at Academy Village, sponsored by the Arizona Senior Academy.

Due to availability of the speakers, the sequence will vary from the UA schedule. Also, three of the lectures will feature the speakers in person while the other three will be presented in streaming video format.

The lectures are free and will begin at 3:30 p.m. in the great room of the Arizona Senior Academy Building.

The schedule of speakers and their topics at Academy Village is as follows.

Wednesday: Janko Nikolich-Zugich, professor and head of the UA Department of Immunobiology and co-director, Arizona Center on Aging. Presented in video streaming format, his topic is "The Biology of Aging: Why Our Bodies Grow Old."

March 14: Shane C. Burgess, dean, UA College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, speaking in person on "Can We, and What if We Do?"

March 15: Carol A. Barnes, regents' professor of psychology and neurology and director of the UA's Evelyn F. McKnight Brain Institute. Presented in streaming video format, her topic is "The Aging of the Brain."

March 21: Vincent J. Del Casino Jr., associate dean, UA College of Social and Behavioral Sciences and professor of geography and development, speaking in person on "Society, Geographic Change and the New Longevity."

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UA scientists to discuss aging

Black Americans die up to 8 years sooner in some states

In every state across the country, white men and women are outliving blacks, in some cases by a margin as wide as eight years, says a new life-expectancy study from theUniversity of California, Los Angeles.

In America, a white male born today has a life expectancy of 74.8 years, while black males are expected to live to 67.7, creating a seven-year disparity. Meanwhile, white women can expect to live to 79.8, while their black counterparts have a life expectancy five years shorter, at 74.6 years, said the UCLA report.

Overall, the life-expectancy gap nationwide seems to be narrowing slightly, according to researchers, but it continues to vary widely by state.

In Florida, the longevity gap for women is among the widest of any state, at seven years. The life expectancy here for black women is 74, while it's 80.9 for white women, said the study, which appeared in this month's issue of Health Services Research. Life expectancy is defined as how long a person born today is expected to live.

That gap is mostly because white women live longer than average in the Sunshine State, said Dr. Nazleen Bharmal, the study's lead researcher and a clinical instructor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

The gap for Florida men is in line with the national average: 75.2 years for white males and 67.8 for black males.

Washington, D.C., had the largest disparity between blacks and whites. at 13.8 years for men and 8.6 for women, said the researchers, who studied national death-certificate data from nearly 18 million non-Hispanic blacks and non-Hispanic whites who died from 1997 to 2004.

New Mexico had the smallest disparity between blacks and whites, at 3.8 years for men and 2.5 for women.

Bharmal warns, however, that although closing the gap is a worthy public-health goal, that shouldn't be the focus.

Where small disparities in life expectancy exist, that happens because the white populations are doing as poorly as black populations, she said.

More here:
Black Americans die up to 8 years sooner in some states

Asexual worms could hold key to becoming immortal

Washington, Feb 28 (ANI): Researchers have shed light on how immortal worms could pave the way for humans to stay fit and avoid the ageing process.

Researchers from The University of Nottingham demonstrated the way in which a species of flatworm overcomes the ageing process to be potentially immortal.

The discovery may elucidate the possibilities of alleviating ageing and age-related characteristics in human cells.

Planarian worms have amazed scientists with their apparently limitless ability to regenerate.

Researchers have been studying their ability to replace aged or damaged tissues and cells in a bid to understand the mechanisms underlying their longevity.

"We've been studying two types of planarian worms; those that reproduce sexually, like us, and those that reproduce asexually, simply dividing in two," Dr Aziz Aboobaker from the University's School of Biology, said.

"Both appear to regenerate indefinitely by growing new muscles, skin, guts and even entire brains over and over again. Usually when stem cells divide - to heal wounds, or during reproduction or for growth - they start to show signs of ageing.

"This means that the stem cells are no longer able to divide and so become less able to replace exhausted specialised cells in the tissues of our bodies. Our ageing skin is perhaps the most visible example of this effect. Planarian worms and their stem cells are somehow able to avoid the ageing process and to keep their cells dividing."

One of the events associated with ageing cells is related to telomere length.

In order to grow and function normally, cells in our bodies must keep dividing to replace cells that are worn out or damaged. During this division process, copies of the genetic material must pass on to the next generation of cells.

The genetic information inside cells is arranged in twisted strands of DNA called chromosomes. At the end of these strands is a protective 'cap' called a telomere.

Telomeres have been likened to the protective end of a shoelace, which stops strands from fraying or sticking to other strands.

Each time a cell divides the protective telomere 'cap' gets shorter. When they get too short, the cell loses its ability to renew and divide. In an immortal animal we would therefore expect cells to be able to maintain telomere length indefinitely so that they can continue to replicate.

Dr Aboobaker predicted that planarian worms actively maintain the ends of their chromosomes in adult stem cells, leading to theoretical immortality.

Dr Thomas Tan performed a series of challenging experiments to explain the worm's immortality. In collaboration with the rest of the team, he also went some way to understanding the clever molecular trick that enabled cells to go on dividing indefinitely without suffering from shortened chromosome ends.

Previous work, leading to the award of the 2009 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, had shown that telomeres could be maintained by the activity of an enzyme called telomerase.

In most sexually reproducing organisms the enzyme is most active only during early development. So as we age, telomeres start to reduce in length.

This project identified a possible planarian version of the gene coding for this enzyme and turned down its activity. This resulted in reduced telomere length and proved it was the right gene.

They were then able to confidently measure its activity and resulting telomere length and found that asexual worms dramatically increase the activity of this gene when they regenerate, allowing stem cells to maintain their telomeres as they divide to replace missing tissues.

However, what puzzled the team is that sexually reproducing planarian worms do not appear to maintain telomere length in the same way.

The difference they observed between asexual and sexual animals was surprising, given that they both appear to have an indefinite regenerative capacity.

The team believe that sexually reproductive worms will eventually show effects of telomere shortening, or that they are able to use another mechanism to maintain telomeres that would not involve the telomerase enzyme.

"Asexual planarian worms demonstrate the potential to maintain telomere length during regeneration. Our data satisfy one of the predictions about what it would take for an animal to be potentially immortal and that it is possible for this scenario to evolve," Dr Aboobaker said.

"The next goals for us are to understand the mechanisms in more detail and to understand more about how you evolve an immortal animal."

"This exciting research contributes significantly to our fundamental understanding of some of the processes involved in ageing, and builds strong foundations for improving health and potentially longevity in other organisms, including humans," Professor Douglas Kell, BBSRC Chief Executive, added.

The study has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

See original here:
Asexual worms could hold key to becoming immortal

Pritikin helps visitors unwind, get healthy

There I was, scooting awkwardly across the floor of the warmed pool, lifting my water weights high in the air, palm trees swaying in the background, when a woman next to me leaned in and whispered: "This place is a miracle. It's changed my life."

Caroline Pinkus, 53, of London, wasn't kidding. Nearing the end of her month-long stay at the Pritikin Longevity Center + Spa, she was losing weight and feeling better, and more importantly had gone from taking five blood pressure pills a day to half a pill.

"I'd gone through life burying my head in the sand. I thought if I dressed nice and fixed my hair and my nails, I still looked good, but I was carrying this weight and I wasn't healthy," she said.

"This place has reformed me."

Pritikin has been changing lives for nearly 40 years. In the 1970s, Nathan Pritikin was among the first to assert that diet and exercise, not drugs and surgery, should be the first line of defence against cardiovascular disease.

He brought that philosophy to the first Pritikin Longevity Center, which opened in 1975 in California.

Today, the Pritikin Longevity Center + Spa calls Miami home. About two years ago, it moved into the spa portion of the Doral Golf Resort. The resort itself includes a large spa, suites, meeting rooms, several pools, a fitness centre, dining and golf.

For most of us, part of enjoying a new city or country involves sampling local fare. Often, we sample lots of it. But what if you actually lost weight on holiday? Pinkus did.

In my three-day stay at Pritikin I lost 1.4kg and my husband lost 2.3kg. (Yes, much of it was water weight, but I didn't feel bloated and disgusting on the flight home as I normally do after a holiday).

Most of the people I talked with at Pritikin were on a return trip or an extended stay, and many said the reason for their trip was to become more healthy.

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Pritikin helps visitors unwind, get healthy

Stents No Better Than Medicine for Stable Heart Disease, Study Says

MONDAY, Feb. 27 (HealthDay News) -- Many people with stable heart disease undergo an expensive artery-opening procedure when medication would work just as well, a new study suggests.

The procedure involves placing a tiny mesh stent, or tube, in a clogged artery. As many as three-quarters of these operations are unnecessary, said lead researcher Dr. David L. Brown, a professor of medicine at Stony Brook University Medical Center in New York.

Money is the driving force, Brown said. "Everybody gets paid to put in stents, the hospital gets paid, the doctor gets paid, the stenting company gets paid," he said. "It's how our fee-for-service environment has taken over the decision making of this branch of cardiology."

Stenting costs an average of $9,500 more to the patient over a lifetime compared with medication, Brown said. Although the procedure, called percutaneous coronary intervention, reduces death and future heart attacks for someone actually having a heart attack, its use in stable heart disease patients is questionable, he noted.

For the study, published Feb. 27 in the Archives of Internal Medicine, Brown and Dr. Kathleen Stergiopoulos, an associate professor of clinical medicine at Stony Brook, analyzed eight trials involving more than 7,000 patients randomly assigned to medical therapy or stenting plus medication. The trials were begun between 1997 and 2005.

In this type of study, called a meta-analysis, researchers look for patterns that might not have been the main intent of the individual trials.

During an average follow-up of more than four years, no significant differences were seen in longevity or quality of life.

Overall, 649 patients died, 322 who received stents and 327 who received medication alone, the study found. Nonfatal heart attacks were suffered by 323 patients with stents and 291 taking only medication.

Among those with stents, 774 needed new procedures to open blocked heart arteries. Among those on medical therapy, 1,049 also needed a procedure to open blocked arteries.

Of more than 4,000 patients for whom data on chest pain -- called angina -- was available, 29 percent of those with stents had persistent chest pain compared with 33 percent of those on medical therapy alone, Brown found.

There is no data that stenting patients with stable heart disease reduces the risk of dying or having a heart attack, Brown said.

"This is not to say no one will need stenting, but only about a third of patients treated initially with medical therapy will need to cross over to stenting," he said.

"People shouldn't blindly agree to have procedures unless the doctor can tell them that there is a documented benefit" in quality or length of life, he said.

Quality of life involves relief of chest pains, he said. If patients on the best medication still have chest pain that is unacceptable to them, stenting becomes appropriate, Brown said.

Medical therapy included aspirin to prevent clotting, beta blockers and ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers to control blood pressure, and statins to lower cholesterol, the researchers noted.

"If you go the medical therapy route, it means the patient has to be followed in an outpatient environment to see how they are responding to the medical therapy, and that takes time and effort that doesn't reimburse very well," he said. "That's part of the equation that drives putting in a stent rather than following the patient on medical therapy."

Dr. James Blankenship, a spokesman for the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, wasn't surprised by the study.

"This is largely old news and many interventional cardiologists are avoiding the pitfalls that the authors are pointing out," he said. "In fact, the volume of interventions among Medicare patients has gone down 18 percent between 2005 and 2010."

"For many people, conservative medical therapy is the right thing, but for those who have a lot of symptoms, having a coronary intervention is a reasonable strategy," he said.

Dr. Gregg C. Fonarow, co-director of the University of California, Los Angeles Preventive Cardiology Program at the David Geffen School of Medicine, agreed that medical therapy is the first choice for patients with stable heart disease.

Coronary stenting should be reserved for those patients who have worsening symptoms despite optimal medical therapy, he said.

For patients with stable coronary artery disease, "the most effective and valuable therapy to prevent disease progression, heart attacks, stroke, heart failure and premature cardiovascular death is a combination of medications together with lifestyle modification," Fonarow added.

More information

For more information on heart disease, visit the American Heart Association.

The rest is here:
Stents No Better Than Medicine for Stable Heart Disease, Study Says

Immortal worms defy aging

Public release date: 27-Feb-2012
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Contact: Emma Thorne
emma.thorne@nottingham.ac.uk
44-115-951-5793
University of Nottingham

Researchers from The University of Nottingham have demonstrated how a species of flatworm overcomes the ageing process to be potentially immortal.

The discovery, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is part of a project funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and Medical Research Council (MRC) and may shed light on the possibilities of alleviating ageing and age-related characteristics in human cells.

Planarian worms have amazed scientists with their apparently limitless ability to regenerate. Researchers have been studying their ability to replace aged or damaged tissues and cells in a bid to understand the mechanisms underlying their longevity.

Dr Aziz Aboobaker from the University's School of Biology, said: "We've been studying two types of planarian worms; those that reproduce sexually, like us, and those that reproduce asexually, simply dividing in two. Both appear to regenerate indefinitely by growing new muscles, skin, guts and even entire brains over and over again.

"Usually when stem cells divide ? to heal wounds, or during reproduction or for growth ? they start to show signs of ageing. This means that the stem cells are no longer able to divide and so become less able to replace exhausted specialised cells in the tissues of our bodies. Our ageing skin is perhaps the most visible example of this effect. Planarian worms and their stem cells are somehow able to avoid the ageing process and to keep their cells dividing."

One of the events associated with ageing cells is related to telomere length. In order to grow and function normally, cells in our bodies must keep dividing to replace cells that are worn out or damaged. During this division process, copies of the genetic material must pass on to the next generation of cells. The genetic information inside cells is arranged in twisted strands of DNA called chromosomes. At the end of these strands is a protective 'cap' called a telomere. Telomeres have been likened to the protective end of a shoelace which stops strands from fraying or sticking to other strands.

Each time a cell divides the protective telomere 'cap' gets shorter. When they get too short, the cell loses its ability to renew and divide. In an immortal animal we would therefore expect cells to be able to maintain telomere length indefinitely so that they can continue to replicate. Dr Aboobaker predicted that planarian worms actively maintain the ends of their chromosomes in adult stem cells, leading to theoretical immortality.

Dr Thomas Tan made some exciting discoveries for this paper as part of his PhD. He performed a series of challenging experiments to explain the worm's immortality. In collaboration with the rest of the team, he also went some way to understanding the clever molecular trick that enabled cells to go on dividing indefinitely without suffering from shortened chromosome ends.

Previous work, leading to the award of the 2009 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, had shown that telomeres could be maintained by the activity of an enzyme called telomerase. In most sexually reproducing organisms the enzyme is most active only during early development. So as we age, telomeres start to reduce in length.

This project identified a possible planarian version of the gene coding for this enzyme and turned down its activity. This resulted in reduced telomere length and proved it was the right gene. They were then able to confidently measure its activity and resulting telomere length and found that asexual worms dramatically increase the activity of this gene when they regenerate, allowing stem cells to maintain their telomeres as they divide to replace missing tissues.

Dr Tan pointed out the importance of the interdisciplinary expertise: "It was serendipitous to be sandwiched between Professor Edward Louis's yeast genetics lab and the Children's Brain Tumour Research Centre, both University of Nottingham research centres with expertise in telomere biology. Aziz and Ed kept demanding clearer proof and I feel we have been able to give a very satisfying answer."

However, what puzzled the team is that sexually reproducing planarian worms do not appear to maintain telomere length in the same way. The difference they observed between asexual and sexual animals was surprising, given that they both appear to have an indefinite regenerative capacity. The team believe that sexually reproductive worms will eventually show effects of telomere shortening, or that they are able to use another mechanism to maintain telomeres that would not involve the telomerase enzyme.

Dr Aboobaker concluded: "Asexual planarian worms demonstrate the potential to maintain telomere length during regeneration. Our data satisfy one of the predictions about what it would take for an animal to be potentially immortal and that it is possible for this scenario to evolve. The next goals for us are to understand the mechanisms in more detail and to understand more about how you evolve an immortal animal."

Professor Douglas Kell, BBSRC Chief Executive, said: "This exciting research contributes significantly to our fundamental understanding of some of the processes involved in ageing, and builds strong foundations for improving health and potentially longevity in other organisms, including humans."

###

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Immortal worms defy aging

Immortal worms defy ageing

ScienceDaily (Feb. 27, 2012) — Researchers from The University of Nottingham have demonstrated how a species of flatworm overcomes the aging process to be potentially immortal.

The discovery, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is part of a project funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and Medical Research Council (MRC) and may shed light on the possibilities of alleviating aging and age-related characteristics in human cells. Planarian worms have amazed scientists with their apparently limitless ability to regenerate. Researchers have been studying their ability to replace aged or damaged tissues and cells in a bid to understand the mechanisms underlying their longevity.

Dr Aziz Aboobaker from the University's School of Biology, said: "We've been studying two types of planarian worms; those that reproduce sexually, like us, and those that reproduce asexually, simply dividing in two. Both appear to regenerate indefinitely by growing new muscles, skin, guts and even entire brains over and over again.

"Usually when stem cells divide -- to heal wounds, or during reproduction or for growth -- they start to show signs of aging. This means that the stem cells are no longer able to divide and so become less able to replace exhausted specialised cells in the tissues of our bodies. Our aging skin is perhaps the most visible example of this effect. Planarian worms and their stem cells are somehow able to avoid the aging process and to keep their cells dividing."

One of the events associated with aging cells is related to telomere length. In order to grow and function normally, cells in our bodies must keep dividing to replace cells that are worn out or damaged. During this division process, copies of the genetic material must pass on to the next generation of cells. The genetic information inside cells is arranged in twisted strands of DNA called chromosomes. At the end of these strands is a protective 'cap' called a telomere. Telomeres have been likened to the protective end of a shoelace which stops strands from fraying or sticking to other strands.

Each time a cell divides the protective telomere 'cap' gets shorter. When they get too short, the cell loses its ability to renew and divide. In an immortal animal we would therefore expect cells to be able to maintain telomere length indefinitely so that they can continue to replicate. Dr Aboobaker predicted that planarian worms actively maintain the ends of their chromosomes in adult stem cells, leading to theoretical immortality.

Dr Thomas Tan made some exciting discoveries for this paper as part of his PhD. He performed a series of challenging experiments to explain the worm's immortality. In collaboration with the rest of the team, he also went some way to understanding the clever molecular trick that enabled cells to go on dividing indefinitely without suffering from shortened chromosome ends.

Previous work, leading to the award of the 2009 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, had shown that telomeres could be maintained by the activity of an enzyme called telomerase. In most sexually reproducing organisms the enzyme is most active only during early development. So as we age, telomeres start to reduce in length.

This project identified a possible planarian version of the gene coding for this enzyme and turned down its activity. This resulted in reduced telomere length and proved it was the right gene. They were then able to confidently measure its activity and resulting telomere length and found that asexual worms dramatically increase the activity of this gene when they regenerate, allowing stem cells to maintain their telomeres as they divide to replace missing tissues.

Dr Tan pointed out the importance of the interdisciplinary expertise: "It was serendipitous to be sandwiched between Professor Edward Louis's yeast genetics lab and the Children's Brain Tumour Research Centre, both University of Nottingham research centres with expertise in telomere biology. Aziz and Ed kept demanding clearer proof and I feel we have been able to give a very satisfying answer."

However, what puzzled the team is that sexually reproducing planarian worms do not appear to maintain telomere length in the same way. The difference they observed between asexual and sexual animals was surprising, given that they both appear to have an indefinite regenerative capacity. The team believe that sexually reproductive worms will eventually show effects of telomere shortening, or that they are able to use another mechanism to maintain telomeres that would not involve the telomerase enzyme.

Dr Aboobaker concluded: "Asexual planarian worms demonstrate the potential to maintain telomere length during regeneration. Our data satisfy one of the predictions about what it would take for an animal to be potentially immortal and that it is possible for this scenario to evolve. The next goals for us are to understand the mechanisms in more detail and to understand more about how you evolve an immortal animal."

Professor Douglas Kell, BBSRC Chief Executive, said: "This exciting research contributes significantly to our fundamental understanding of some of the processes involved in aging, and builds strong foundations for improving health and potentially longevity in other organisms, including humans."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Nottingham, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.

Journal Reference:

Thomas C. J. Tan, Ruman Rahman, Farah Jaber-Hijazi, Daniel A. Felix, Chen Chen, Edward J. Louis, and Aziz Aboobaker. Telomere maintenance and telomerase activity are differentially regulated in asexual and sexual worms. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, February 27, 2012 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1118885109

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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Immortal worms defy ageing

Tai chi may help Parkinson’s patients, study concludes

LOS ANGELES — A six-month program of tai chi exercises helped people with various stages of Parkinson's disease improve stability, their ability to walk and reduced the frequency of falls.

A study released this month in the New England Journal of Medicine compared a six-month tailored tai chi program to resistance training and stretching to see which was most effective at improving functional movement, walking and balance for Parkinson's patients.

Researchers randomly assigned 195 men and women ages 40 to 85 who were in stages one to four of Parkinson's disease (on a scale of one to five). Parkinson's is a neurological disorder caused by a loss of neurons that produce dopamine, a chemical involved with muscle function and movement coordination. It can result in tremors, stiffness, poor coordination and more difficulty doing daily activities. It also can lead to a higher risk of falls, which can cause serious injuries.

Tai chi, a discipline that incorporates slow, deliberate movements, plus breathing, has health benefits that include reducing stress and improving balance and posture.

The study participants were randomly assigned to hourlong, twice-weekly sessions of tai chi, resistance training or stretching, for six months. Researchers assessed their status at the beginning of the study, at three and six months, and three months after the study ended.

The tai chi participants did better than the stretching group on a few measures: leaning without losing balance, having better directional control of their body and walking skills. They outperformed the resistance-training group on balance and stride length. Those in the tai chi group also reduced their frequency of falls more than the stretching group, and they were on a par with the resistance group.

Three months after the study ended, those in the tai chi group were able to maintain the benefits they had gained.

“Since many training features in the program are functionally oriented,” Oregon Research Institute scientist Fuzhong Li said, “the improvements in the balance and gait measures that we demonstrated highlight the potential of Tai Chi-based movements in rehabilitating patients with these types of problems and, consequently, easing cardinal symptoms of Parkinson's disease and improving mobility, flexibility, balance and range of motion.” Li was the lead author of the study.

He added that tai chi has several advantages: “It is a low-cost activity that does not require equipment, it can be done anywhere, at any time, and the movements can be easily learned. It can also be incorporated into a rehabilitation setting as part of existing treatment. Similarly, because of its simplicity, certain aspects of this Tai Chi program can also be prescribed to patients as a self-care/home activity.”

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Tai chi may help Parkinson's patients, study concludes

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