Study uncovers key Alzheimer's gene in African American brains

Researchers have identified the gene ADAMTS2 as significantly more active in brain tissue from African Americans with Alzheimer's disease, marking a potential shared biological pathway across racial groups. This finding emerges from the largest study of its kind using brain samples from over 200 African American donors. The gene's prominence also appeared in a separate analysis of White individuals, suggesting broader implications for treatment.

Alzheimer's disease disproportionately affects African Americans, striking them at roughly twice the rate of White or European-ancestry individuals in the U.S. Factors like unequal healthcare access, educational disparities, and higher incidences of cardiovascular disease and diabetes contribute to this gap. However, genetic research has often overlooked African American populations due to small sample sizes in prior studies.

In a landmark effort, scientists at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine examined gene expression in post-mortem prefrontal cortex tissue from 207 African American brain donors. Of these, 125 had pathologically confirmed Alzheimer's, while 82 served as controls. The samples were sourced from 14 NIH-funded Alzheimer's Research Centers nationwide.

The analysis revealed numerous genes differing between the groups, many previously unlinked to the disease. The standout was ADAMTS2, whose activity was 1.5 times higher in Alzheimer's-affected tissue compared to controls. Remarkably, this gene ranked highest in an independent study by the same team, which analyzed brain tissue from a larger cohort of White individuals—comparing those with Alzheimer's pathology and symptoms to resilient cases.

"To our knowledge, this is the first time in similarly designed AD genetics studies that the most significant finding was the same in both white and African Americans," said Lindsay A. Farrer, PhD, chief of biomedical genetics at the school and corresponding author.

Farrer highlighted the discovery's potential: "The fact that expression of ADAMTS2 is significantly and substantially higher in brain tissue from both Whites and Blacks with AD not only points to a shared biological process leading to AD, but also elevates the priority of further research involving this gene which could determine its suitability as a potential therapeutic target."

While many Alzheimer's risk variants vary by population, this overlap suggests common mechanisms. The study, published online in Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association, was funded by multiple NIH grants but independent of funder influence.

This advance could refine understanding of Alzheimer's genetics in underrepresented groups, paving the way for targeted therapies.

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Realistic split-image illustration showing obesity-linked faster rise in Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers versus normal weight, highlighting blood tests detecting changes earlier than brain scans.
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Obesity linked to faster rise in Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers, study finds

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New research finds that blood biomarkers associated with Alzheimer’s disease increase significantly faster in people with obesity than in those without. Drawing on five years of data from 407 volunteers, the study suggests that blood tests can detect obesity‑related changes earlier than brain scans, underscoring obesity as a major modifiable risk factor for Alzheimer’s.

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A large-scale international study has found that age-related memory decline stems from broad structural changes across the brain, rather than a single region or gene. Analyzing over 10,000 MRI scans from thousands of healthy adults, researchers observed that brain shrinkage's impact on memory intensifies nonlinearly in later life. The findings highlight a distributed vulnerability that accelerates memory loss once a tipping point is reached.

Scientists in the U.K. and Canada report the first direct visualization and measurement of alpha‑synuclein oligomers—the small protein clusters long suspected of triggering Parkinson’s—in human brain tissue. Using an ultra‑sensitive imaging method, the team found these clusters were larger and more numerous in Parkinson’s than in age‑matched controls, a result published in Nature Biomedical Engineering that may help guide earlier diagnosis and targeted therapies.

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알츠하이머 시험이 암 연구에서 영감을 받은 다중 표적 접근으로 전환 중이며, Novo Nordisk의 세마글루타이드 실패에도 불구하고. Eli Lilly의 Kisunla와 Eisai 및 Biogen의 Leqembi 두 약물만이 진행을 늦추기 위해 널리 승인됨. 이러한 진화는 뇌 퇴화 질환을 복잡한 시스템으로 간주하며, 전 세계적 영향 속에서 이를 멈추는 새로운 방법을 모색함.

 

 

 

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