The
Huntington's Scene In New Zealand |
|
||||
| Articles taken from the Sept. 2003 Huntington's News. The Quarterly Newsletter of the Huntington's Disease Associations of New Zealand |
Secrets of the brain revealed
NZ Herald
11.07.2003
By SIMON COLLINS science reporter
New Zealand
scientists have helped topple a long-held belief that our brains start to decline from the
teenage years.
A team at
Auckland University's medical school, led by Professor Richard Faull, has found that our
bodies actually create new brain cells when they are hit with brain disorders such as
Huntington's disease.
The discovery
offers hope for eventual treatment of previously incurable brain diseases such as
Huntington's, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and epilepsy.
"Up till now
the only thing we have been able to tell patients with any certainty, once we have made a
diagnosis [of brain disease], is that they are going to get worse," Professor Faull
said.
"To be able
to turn that around and say we've just found something which shows that the diseased brain
does make new brain cells, and if we can make that go faster, suddenly you are holding a
glimmer of hope."
The discovery is
only a first step, and Professor Faull said scientists faced "a pretty fundamental
challenge" to work out how to help brain cells multiply more quickly.
But the discovery
itself had "turned around science by showing the brain can repair itself".
"When I went
to medical school I was told that by the age of 15, whatever size of brain you had, that
was it for life, and you had to look after your brain because you were gradually going to
lose a few more brain cells each year."
That belief was
first challenged five years ago when United States researchers gave cancer patients a
"marker" that showed up on every new cell in their brains. They were testing a
drug and wanted to see whether it stopped tumours growing.
The drug did not
work and the patients died. But when researchers opened the dead patients' brains, they
found the "new-cell" marker not only in the tumours but also in other cells in a
part of the brain called the hippocampus.
Professor Faull's
team used a unique "bank" of brains donated by the families of brain disease
victims to find that new cells are also generated in a region of the brain called the
basal ganglia, which co-ordinates movement.
Doctoral student
Maurice Curtis and other researchers used three stains as markers to test whether the new
cells were true brain cells, or neurons, rather than glia, the connective cells which were
thought to just help clean up the brain.
They found that
the brains of patients with Huntington's disease - a genetic disorder which makes victims
twitch - were generating both glia and neurons.
"The
exciting thing is that the human brain is creating increased numbers of new brain
cells," Professor Faull said. "The problem, of course, is that for the
Huntington's patients, it's too little, too late. So we have to try and see how we can
enhance this process."
The discovery
does not mean that eventually we may live forever.
"We don't
deny there is an ageing process," Professor Faull said. "But it's not inevitable
that you are going to become dumber and dumber.
"Everyone
thought senile dementia was an inevitable process of ageing, that if you lived long enough
you would lose your marbles.
"But
Alzheimer's disease is a form of dementia that we now know is caused by a disease. Once
you say it's a disease, it's not an inevitable process of growing old.
"If it's
caused by a disease, therefore there must be a cause, and therefore there must be a
cure."
Studies showed
that putting animals in more challenging environments boosted the number of new brain
cells they generated.
"Rats that
have running wheels or bits of paper to tear up make more brain cells," Professor
Faull said.
"So 'use it
or lose it' is an important message. The more supportive the environment, the more active
you keep your brain, the longer you are going to keep your brain."
He said the
discovery was only possible because families of brain disease patients provided the brains
of loved ones within hours of death.
(Reprinted with permission from the NZ Herald)