New Imaging Method for Alzheimer's Disease

To understand what happens in the brain when Alzheimer's disease develops, researchers need to be able to study the molecular structures in the neurons affected by Alzheimer's disease. Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have tested a new imaging method for this purpose.

In Alzheimer's disease, so-called beta-amyloid plaques are formed in the brain, and neurons in the brain die. When the plaque becomes visible in brain tissue, the disease is already in an advanced stage. As more and more nerve cells die, memory disruptions begin, something that eventually results in memory loss. But what happens in the nerve cells before amyloid plaques appear, and why do nerve cells die?

“This is a question that researchers have long struggled to find answers to. We have not had enough imaging techniques to study the structural changes in nerve cells. This is required to detect very early changes and, therefore, potentially understand the triggers,” said researcher Oxana Klementieva, group leader for medical microscopy at Lund University.

Using a new method, optical photothermal spectroscopy, O-PTIR, researchers at Lund University have collaborated with colleagues at Synchrotron SOLEIL in France to study protein structures within nerve cells – without using the chemical processing of nerve cells required for other imaging techniques, something that can affect the very structures that scientists want to study.

“We saw that the structure of the protein changes in different ways depending on where in the nerve cell it is. So far, there have been no methods that can produce these types of images, giving us insight into what the first molecular changes in neurons actually look like in Alzheimer's disease,” said Klementieva, who with her colleagues have previously shown that early structural changes of beta-amyloid happen before amyloid plaques appear.

The goal now is to investigate where in the cell the structure change happens – and whether it can help to explain the mechanisms behind Alzheimer's disease. “If it depends on several different mechanisms, something I believe to be the case, we therefore would need different types of treatments,” said Klementieva.

The researchers have been able to use the new method to image neurons affected by early-stage Alzheimer's disease in mice before the death of the nerve cells, something that is important when mapping the disease mechanisms. Klementieva believes that the new technology can also be used to study protein structures related to other diseases that affect the brain, such as Parkinson’s disease, Lewy Body dementia, and frontal lobe dementia.

Source