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Jan. 22, 2020
A team of scientists from Canada, the UK and US has
discovered a new compound that could lead to better treatments for a host of serious brain disorders,
including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s disease and depression.
Graham
Collingridge, senior investigator at Sinai Health’s Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute and
director of the Tanz Centre for Neurodegenerative Diseases at the University of Toronto, was part of an
international consortium of researchers that created a new chemical tool for revealing how specific cell
receptors function in the brain.
Their study, published
recently in the journal Nature Communications, is an important step forward for studying Alzheimer's,
epilepsy, stroke and even Parkinson's disease. The new compound targets certain members of the NMDA
receptor, a class of receptor proteins that plays an essential role in learning and
memory.
“Errors in NMDA receptors can lead to dementia and other serious disorders
of the nervous system,” Collingridge explained. “Although we know that targeting NMDA
receptors can be highly beneficial, there is room for improvement.”
Collingridge
points to drugs like memantine, a medication used to delay memory loss in Alzheimer’s disease, and
ketamine, an anesthetic and antidepressant. Both target NMDA receptors, but memantine offers only
temporary relief and ketamine has potentially serious side effects.
Biologists from Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York and chemists from the University of Bristol in the UK worked
together to create chemical compounds that inhibit the activity of certain types of NMDA
receptor.
The researchers hope by inhibiting some receptors while letting others function,
they can now identify the roles different types of NMDA receptors play in both healthy and diseased
brains.
“Both memantine and ketamine block all the subtypes with little
selectivity,” Collingridge said. “Our new compounds just target two of the four major
subtypes - the ones where we think the major therapeutic potential resides.”
Dr.
Hiro Furukawa, principal investigator at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, co-led the study with Dr. David
Jane's chemistry lab at the University of Bristol. Moving forward, these two groups of collaborators
will work on further refining the new compound for use in research.
Collingridge’s
lab at LTRI in Toronto will focus on identifying which diseases it should target in developing new
therapeutics -- including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, depression and autism.
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