Don't tell the alkaline water nutters
Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have found new evidence in
lab-grown mouse brain cells, called astrocytes, that one root of
Alzheimer's disease may be a simple imbalance in acid-alkaline -- or pH
-- chemistry inside endosomes, the nutrient and chemical cargo shuttles
in cells.
Astrocytes work to clear so-called amyloid beta proteins from the
spaces between neurons, but decades of evidence has shown that if the
clearing process goes awry, amyloid proteins pile up around neurons,
leading to the characteristic amyloid plaques and nerve cell
degeneration that are the hallmarks of memory-destroying Alzheimer's
disease.
The new study, described online June 26 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
also reports that the scientists gave drugs called histone deacetylase
(HDAC) inhibitors to pH-imbalanced mice cells engineered with a common
Alzheimer's gene variant. The experiment successfully reversed the pH
problem and improved the capacity for amyloid beta clearance.
Link.
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