Why Alzheimer’s drug is both safe and effective
August 19th, 2010 - 3:37 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 19 (ANI): A new study has unravelled exactly how memantine-a drug used to treat Alzheimer’s disease- helps patients without causing serious side effects.
It is known that memantine (marketed in the United States as Namenda), which is currently FDA-approved can treat moderate-to-severe Alzheimer’s disease.
Developed, in part by Dr. Stuart A. Lipton, Director of the Del E. Web Center for Neuroscience, Aging and Stem Cell Research at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute (Sanford-Burnham), memantine improves symptoms by blocking abnormal activity of glutamate, a chemical that transmits messages between nerve cells.
In the new study, researchers at Sanford-Burnham led by Dr. Lipton unravel exactly how the drug helps Alzheimer’s patients without causing serious side effects.
“While memantine is partially effective in treating Alzheimer’s disease, one of its major advantages is how safe and well-tolerated it is clinically,” said Lipton
Memantine is a particularly safe treatment for Alzheimer’s disease because it dampens excessive glutamate signaling that occurs away from synapses without blocking glutamate activity at the synapses.
This is important because interfering with synaptic glutamate signaling would disrupt normal brain activity.
“We showed definitively for the first time that memantine, the drug our group developed for Alzheimer’s disease, works in a unique way. It inhibits a protein that binds glutamate called the NMDA receptor, but predominantly blocks NMDA receptors that signal molecularly to cause neuronal injury and death. It spares the synaptic receptors that mediate normal communication between nerve cells in the brain,” said Lipton.
The finding helps explain why the drug is so well tolerated by Alzheimer’s patients and might provide hints for the development of future therapies targeting the NMDA receptor and similar cellular machinery in other diseases.
The study is appearing in The Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)
- Scientist converts skin cells into brain cells - Jul 29, 2011
- New clues about cause of brain cell death in Parkinson's, Alzheimer's - Jul 30, 2010
- Potential treatment for Huntington's disease found - Nov 16, 2009
- New study sheds light on brain's inherent ability to focus on learning - Dec 09, 2010
- Manipulating muscle stem cells could treat muscular dystrophy - Oct 10, 2010
- Burning more sugar drives super athleticism - Dec 01, 2011
- Painkilling drug shuts down cancer cell growth - Jun 15, 2010
- Cancer Cells May Kill Themselves On Taking A Painkiller - Jun 21, 2010
- Scientists convert skin cells to stem cells more effieciently - Feb 03, 2011
- Heart hormone helps shape fat metabolism - Feb 07, 2012
- Biomarkers for particularly aggressive prostate cancers discovered - Jul 13, 2010
- Nicotine could play role in Alzheimer's disease therapy - Oct 14, 2010
- Re-engineered toxins can treat asthma, arthritis - Jan 02, 2012
- Orchid gets tentative FDA approval for Alzheimer's drug - Jan 08, 2010
- Drugs rescue fruit flies from Alzheimer's - Jul 17, 2010
Tags: abnormal activity, brain activity, burnham, cellular machinery, diseases, dr stuart, lipton, medical research institute, memantine, namenda, nerve cells, neuronal injury, nmda receptor, protein, receptors, sanford, stem cell research, study researchers, synapses, web center