Newswise, June 24, 2016 — A new study from
Western University is helping to explain why the long-term use of common
anticholinergic drugs used to treat conditions like allergies and overactive
bladder lead to an increased risk of developing dementia later in life. The findings
show that long-term suppression of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine - a
target for anticholinergic drugs - results in dementia-like changes in the
brain.
"There have been several
epidemiological studies showing that people who use these drugs for a long
period of time increase their risk of developing dementia," said Marco
Prado, PhD, a Scientist at the Robarts Research Institute and Professor in the
departments of Physiology and Pharmacology and Anatomy & Cell Biology at
Western's Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry. "So the question we
asked is 'why?'"
For this study, published in the journalCerebral
Cortex, the researchers used genetically modified mouse models to block
acetylcholine in order to mimic the action of the drugs in the brain. Neurons
that use acetylcholine are known to be affected in Alzheimer's disease; and the
researchers were able to show a causal relationship between blocking
acetylcholine and Alzheimer's-like pathology in mice.
"We hope that by understanding what is
happening in the brain due to the loss of acetylcholine, we might be able to
find new ways to decrease Alzheimer's pathology," said Prado.
Prado and his partner Dr. Vania Prado, DDS,
PhD, along with PhD candidates Ben Kolisnyk and Mohammed Al-Onaizi, have shown
that blocking acetylcholine-mediated signals in neurons causes a change in
approximately 10 per cent of the Messenger RNAs in a region of the brain
responsible for declarative memory.
Messenger RNA encodes for specific amino
acids which are the building blocks for proteins and several of the changes
they uncovered in the brains of mutant mice are similar to those observed in
Alzheimer's disease.
"We demonstrated that in order to keep
neurons healthy you need acetylcholine," said Prado. "So if
acetylcholine actions are suppressed, brain cells respond by drastically
changing their messenger RNAs and when they age, they show signs of pathology
that have many of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease."
Importantly, by targeting one of the
messenger RNA pathways they uncovered, the researchers improved pathology in
the mutant mice.
The study, conducted at Western's Robarts
Research Institute, used human tissue samples to validate the mouse data and
mouse models to show not only the physical changes in the brain, but also
behavioral and memory changes.
The researchers were able to show that
long-term suppression of acetylcholine caused brain cell to die and as a
consequence decrease memory in the aging mice.
"When the mutant mice were old, memory
tasks they mastered at young age were almost impossible for them, whereas
normal mice still performed well," said Kolisnyk.
The researchers hope their findings will
have an impact on reducing the burden of dementia by providing new ways to
reverse the loss of acetylcholine.
The researchers were supported by CIHR,
Brain Canada and NSERC and the work was done in collaboration with researchers
at the UCL Institute of Neurology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and
McMaster University.
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