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UCLA/VA
STUDY FINDS CHEMICAL FOUND IN CURRY MAY HELP IMMUNE SYSTEM
CLEAR AMYLOID PLAQUES FOUND IN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
Date: October 3,
2006
Contact: Rachel Champeau ( rchampeau@mednet.ucla.edu )
Phone: 310-794-2270
UCLA/VA Study Finds
Chemical Found in Curry May Help Immune System Clear Amyloid
Plaques Found in Alzheimer’s Disease
UCLA/VA researchers found that curcumin — a chemical
found in curry and turmeric — may help the immune system
clear the brain of amyloid beta, which form the plaques found
in Alzheimer's disease.
Published in the
Oct. 9 issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, the early
laboratory findings may lead to a new approach in treating
Alzheimer's disease by enhancing the natural function of the
immune system using curcumin, known for its anti-inflammatory
and anti-oxidant properties.
Using blood samples
from six Alzheimer's disease patients and three healthy control
patients, the researchers isolated cells called macrophages,
which are the immune system's PacMen that travel through the
brain and body, gobbling up waste products, including amyloid
beta.
The team treated
the macrophages with a drug derived from curcumin for 24 hours
in a cell culture and then introduced amyloid beta. Treated
macrophages from three out of six Alzheimer's disease patients
showed improved uptake or ingestion of the waste product compared
to the patients' macrophages not treated with curcumin. Macrophages
from the healthy controls, which were already effectively
clearing amyloid beta, showed no change when curcumin was
added.
"Curcumin
improved ingestion of amyloid beta by immune cells in 50 percent
of patients with Alzheimer's disease. These initial findings
demonstrate that curcumin may help boost the immune system
of specific Alzheimer's disease patients," said Dr. Milan
Fiala, study author and a researcher with the David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA and the VA Greater Los Angeles
Health Care System. "We are hopeful that these positive
results in a test tube may translate to clinical use, but
more studies need to be done before curcumin can be recommended."
The patients ranged
in age from 65 to 84. Fiala noted that the patients whose
immune cells responded were younger and had higher scores
on a Mini-Mental State Examination suggesting that curcumin
may help those with less advanced dementia. Some of the patients
may have already had additional curcumin in their systems
due to participation in another UCLA study, which may have
impacted findings.
"Our next
step will be to identify the factors that helped these immune
cells respond," said Laura Zhang, a study author and
a UCLA/VA research assistant in Fiala's lab.
Fiala noted that
the method researchers used to test the immune cell response
of macrophages may provide a novel way of evaluating the effectiveness
of drugs in clearing amyloid beta from the brain and may help
to individualize Alzheimer's disease treatment.
According to Fiala,
macrophages are the soldiers of the innate immune system —
the part of the immune system which is present at birth. Curcumin
may support the body's natural immune fighting function in
directly helping macrophages clean away amyloid-beta. The
treatment of macrophages with curcumin is radically different
from some of the vaccine approaches currently being studied.
The study was funded
by the Alzheimer's Disease Association and private donors.
The curcumin derived drug was provided by the Sabinsa Corporation,
a company that manufacturers phytonutrients and specialty
chemicals for nutritional, pharmaceutical and food industries.
Fiala participated in a speaking engagement for Sabinsa.
Other study authors
include: Michelle Mahanian, Justin Zaghi and Mark Rosenthal
from the Department of Medicine, Veterans Affairs Greater
Los Angeles Healthcare System and David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA; John Cashman of the Human BioMolecular Research
Institute, San Diego; James Sayre of the Department
of Biostatistics, UCLA School of Public Health; Araceli Espinosa
of the UCLA Department of Neurobiology; Vladimir Badmaev,
Applied Pharmacology, Sabinsa Corporation, New Jersey; Michael
C. Graves, UCLA Department of Neurology; and George Bernard,
UCLA Department of Neurology and Division of Oral Biology
and Medicine, UCLA School of Dentistry.
-UCLA-
RC419
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