Study first to show pharmacological chaperone therapy prevents Alzheimer’s in mice

Temple study first to show pharmacological chaperone therapy prevents Alzheimer's in mice
Domenico Praticò, M.D., the Scott Richards North Star Charitable Foundation Chair for Alzheimer’s Research, Professor in the Departments of Pharmacology and Microbiology, and Director of the Alzheimer’s Center at Temple in the Lewis Katz School of Medicine. Credit: Temple University Health System

Like pieces of tape that crumple, stick together, and can be turned into a ball, proteins that begin to lose their shape become sticky and tend to clump together. When this happens, rather than being transported to recycling sites within cells, old or dysfunctional proteins instead become trapped within cellular compartments. Eventually, they accumulate to the point that they gum up cellular machinery, causing major problems.

Read more…