Researchers find drug quickly reverses Alzheimer’s symptoms in mice

Neuroscientists at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine have made a dramatic breakthrough in their efforts to find a cure for Alzheimer’s disease. The researchers’ findings, published in the journal Science, show that use of a drug in mice appears to quickly reverse the pathological, cognitive and memory deficits caused by the onset of Alzheimer’s. The results point to the significant potential that the medication, bexarotene, has to help the roughly 5.4 million Americans suffering from the progressive brain disease.

Bexarotene has been approved for the treatment of cancer by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for more than a decade. These experiments explored whether the medication might also be used to help patients with Alzheimer’s disease, and the results were more than promising.

Alzheimer’s disease arises in large part from the body’s inability to clear naturally occurring amyloid beta from the brain. In 2008, Gary Landreth, PhD, professor of neurosciences and senior author of this study, discovered that the main cholesterol carrier in the brain, Apolipoprotein E (ApoE), facilitated the clearance of the amyloid beta proteins.

Landreth and his colleagues chose to explore the effectiveness of bexarotene for increasing ApoE expression. The elevation of brain ApoE levels, in turn, speeds the clearance of amyloid beta from the brain. Bexarotene acts by stimulating retinoid X receptors (RXR), which control how much ApoE is produced.

In particular, the researchers were struck by the speed with which bexarotene improved memory deficits and behavior even as it also acted to reverse the pathology of Alzheimer’s disease. The present view of the scientific community is that small soluble forms of amyloid beta cause the memory impairments seen in animal models and humans with the disease. Within six hours of administering bexarotene, however, soluble amyloid levels fell by 25 percent; even more impressive, the effect lasted as long as three days. Finally, this shift was correlated with rapid improvement in a broad range of behaviors in three different mouse models of Alzheimer’s.

One example of the improved behaviors involved the typical nesting instinct of the mice. When Alzheimer’s-diseased mice encountered material suited for nesting—in this case, tissue paper—they did nothing to create a space to nest. This reaction demonstrated that they had lost the ability to associate the tissue paper with the opportunity to nest. Just 72 hours after the bexarotene treatment, however, the mice began to use the paper to make nests. Administration of the drug also improved the ability of the mice to sense and respond to odors.

Bexarotene treatment also worked quickly to stimulate the removal of amyloid plaques from the brain. The plaques are compacted aggregates of amyloid that form in the brain and are the pathological hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease. Researchers found that more than half of the plaques had been cleared within 72 hours. Ultimately, the reduction totaled 75 percent. It appears that the bexarotene reprogrammed the brain’s immune cells to “eat” or phagocytose the amyloid deposits. This observation demonstrated that the drug addresses the amount of both soluble and deposited forms of amyloid beta within the brain and reverses the pathological features of the disease in mice.

This study identifies a link between the primary genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease and a potential therapy to address it. Humans have three forms of ApoE: ApoE2, ApoE3, and ApoE4. Possession of the ApoE4 gene greatly increases the likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease. Previously, the Landreth laboratory had shown that this form of ApoE was impaired in its ability of clear amyloid. The new work suggests that elevation of ApoE levels in the brain may be an effective therapeutic strategy to clear the forms of amyloid associated with impaired memory and cognition.

“This is an unprecedented finding,” says Paige Cramer, PhD candidate at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and first author of the study. “Previously, the best existing treatment for Alzheimer’s disease in mice required several months to reduce plaque in the brain.”

Added Landreth: “This is a particularly exciting and rewarding study because of the new science we have discovered and the potential promise of a therapy for Alzheimer’s disease. We need to be clear; the drug works quite well in mouse models of the disease. Our next objective is to ascertain if it acts similarly in humans. We are at an early stage in translating this basic science discovery into a treatment.”

Daniel Wesson, PhD, assistant professor of neurosciences and co-author of the study agreed.

“Many often think of Alzheimer’s as a problem of remembering and learning, but the prevalent reality is this disease spreads throughout the brain, resulting in serious insults to numerous functions,” he said. “The results of this study, showing the preservation of behaviors across a wide spectrum, and accompanying brain function, are tremendously exciting and suggest great promise in the utility of this approach in treatment of Alzheimer’s disease.”

Bexarotene has a good safety and side-effect profile. The Case Western Reserve researchers hope these attributes will help speed the transition to clinical trials of the drug.

Landreth said modest resources funded this self-described “far-fetched idea.” Crucial support came from the Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Foundation, the Thome Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

The Science study was co-authored by John R. Cirrito, Jessica L. Restivo, Whitney D. Goebel, Washington University School of Medicine; C.Y. Daniel Lee, Colleen Karlo, Adriana E. Zinn, Brad T. Casali, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine; Donald A. Wilson, New York University School of Medicine, and Michael J. James, Kurt R. Brunden, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania.

Visit Case Western Reserve University’s YouTube channel to view a short video about the School of Medicine discovery.

9 Comments

  1. Herb Calnhoun

    02/09/2012

    so the drug has been available since 1999 for cancer patients
    are there any Alzheimer sufferers who have received the drug?
    best source might be insurance companies.
    could a cancer patient who received the drug that had alzheimers show any improvement in their alzheimers ?

    might show that the normal dose of the drug in cancer treatment improves Alzheimers suffers, or not.

    lots of luck, if you start a fund to help with research please let me know

    Reply
  2. samira Hussney

    02/10/2012

    this is a very interesting study I am very interested in being a study participant my mother had alzheimers and I am petrified of it. please let me know if I could join a study thanks

    Reply
  3. Karen DuBrucq

    02/10/2012

    I would also love to have my mother participate in this trial. She has Alzheimer’s and has been progressively getting worse. Her health is very good otherwise. I’m sure you’ll get lots of requests, but if there is a way to get her considered, please let me know. Thank you.

    Reply
  4. Ross Duffin

    02/10/2012

    I was startled and pleased to read about CWRU’s role in this important discovery, and hope that having the researchers here may mean that my comment is actually read by someone involved. A close relative died after suffering with Alzheimer’s for years, and now another close relative is suffering severe and progressive memory loss. What I don’t understand about this is why researchers are being cautious about human experimentation. If the patients are in their 90s and far gone with the disease, I’ll bet both they and their families would be glad of any radical intervention that might possibly work in an otherwise desperate and inexorable decline. If the drug is already approved for other human uses, I can’t see why it should take years of drug trials to see if it works on Alzheimer’s. Ask for volunteers and see what happens.

    Reply
  5. Theresa Weathers

    02/13/2012

    My husband has early onset Alzheimer’s. He was diagnosed at 55 and now is 57. I would like to have more information about any trial you are doing and whether my husband might be considered. We are just finishing the IVIG trial and don’t know whether he was given the placebo or the drug, but he’s continued to decline.

    Reply
  6. Mary Kay Shane

    02/23/2012

    I would like to know if my mother could be a participant in the clinical trial. She has had Alzheimer’s for a few years and is currently in assisted living. Her disease is progressing and her family would be grateful for a chance at a human drug trial.

    Reply
  7. Wolfgang Juekoff

    09/04/2012

    I would be very interested in taking part in a clinical trial.
    I am 73 and have very mild symptoms of AD so far. BUT: a genetic test revealed that I have 2 copies of the APO e4 variant.

    Reply
  8. Mike

    10/20/2012

    My mother in law has it as well and other wise is in excellent health

    Reply

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