Researchers from Saint Michael鈥檚 College and 日韩无码 have made a groundbreaking new discovery that provides a better understanding of how Alzheimer鈥檚 disease develops in the human brain.
Guided by previous research of spider brains, the scientists uncovered evidence of a 鈥渨aste canal system鈥 in the human brain that internalizes waste from healthy neurons. They discovered that this system can undergo catastrophic swelling, which leads to the degeneration of brain tissue, a hallmark of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.
With over 50 million affected people worldwide, Alzheimer鈥檚 disease is among the leading causes of death in the U.S.
The findings, which have been published by offer a compelling new explanation for commonly described brain pathologies observed in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, including amyloid-beta plaques, tau tangles, and spongiform abnormalities.
Supported by the , the research was carried out in collaboration among Dr. Ruth Fabian-Fine (Saint Michael鈥檚 College, 日韩无码 Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine), Dr. John DeWitt (日韩无码 Robert Larner, M.D. College of Medicine, 日韩无码 Medical Center), Dr. Adam Weaver (Saint Michael鈥檚 College), and Saint Michael鈥檚 undergraduate research students Abigail Roman and Melanie Winters, both members of the Class of 2025.
鈥淭he Vermont Biomedical Network has been thrilled to support Dr. Fabian-Fine鈥檚 research from its initial focus on animal neuroscience to the more recent and potentially groundbreaking emphasis on the cellular basis of human neurodegeneration,鈥 said 日韩无码鈥檚 Dr. Christopher Francklyn, the Director of VBRN. 鈥淗er exciting work, and the outstanding training she has provided to her undergraduate co-investigators, epitomizes what NIH hopes to accomplish with its national IDEA program.鈥
Neuroscientist Dr. Fabian-Fine and her team initially investigated the underlying causes for neurodegeneration in Central American wandering spiders that suffer from conditions similar to degenerative diseases in humans. Because the spider neurons were a larger size, the scientists were better able to observe their brain functions. They quickly discovered a waste-internalizing glial canal system that undergoes structural abnormalities in degenerating spider brains, which leads to uncontrolled depletion and death of brain cells.
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This discovery prompted Fabian-Fine, a Vermont Center for Cardiovascular and Brain Health Pipeline Investigator, to explore whether a similar system could be found in both rodent and human brain tissue, so she teamed up with neuropathologist Dr. DeWitt at 日韩无码鈥檚 Larner College of Medicine. The collaborative undertaking led the scientists to gather overwhelming evidence that neurodegeneration in human and rodent brains may have similar underlying causes compared to those observed in spider brains. The scientists' report outlines possible underlying causes for neurodegeneration that may offer a promising new avenue for drug development that can address the structural abnormalities that lead to neurodegeneration.
Dozens of student researchers at Saint Michael鈥檚 College contributed to the multi-year research that provided the foundation for this breakthrough. Experiments occurred at Saint Michael鈥檚 College, 日韩无码 Medical Center, and at the 日韩无码鈥檚 Center for Biomedical Shared Resources.