Lab scene showing arginine supplements reducing Alzheimer’s pathology in mice and fruit flies, with healthy animals, brain scans, and positive research graphs.
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Arginine supplement curbs Alzheimer’s pathology in animal models

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Researchers at Kindai University report that oral arginine, a common amino acid, suppresses amyloid‑β aggregation and its toxic effects in fruit fly and mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease. In treated animals, amyloid buildup fell, inflammation markers dropped, and behavioral performance improved, suggesting arginine could be a low‑cost candidate for drug repurposing.

Alzheimer’s disease is one of the leading causes of dementia worldwide and currently has no definitive cure. While antibody drugs targeting amyloid‑β (Aβ) have recently been approved, their clinical benefits remain limited and they can be expensive and associated with immune‑related side effects. Researchers are therefore exploring simpler, safer, and more affordable approaches.

In a new study from Kindai University in Osaka, Japan, scientists investigated the potential of the amino acid arginine as a way to limit Aβ pathology. The work, led by graduate student Kanako Fujii, Professor Yoshitaka Nagai of the Department of Neurology at the Kindai University Faculty of Medicine, and Associate Professor Toshihide Takeuchi of the Life Science Research Institute, was published online on October 30, 2025, in Neurochemistry International.

Using in vitro assays, the team first showed that arginine can inhibit the formation of Aβ42 aggregates in a concentration‑dependent manner. They then evaluated oral arginine administration in two established Alzheimer’s disease models:

  • A Drosophila model expressing Aβ42 with the Arctic mutation (E22G)
  • An App^NL‑G‑F knock‑in mouse model carrying three familial Alzheimer’s‑related mutations

According to the study, arginine treatment in both models significantly reduced Aβ accumulation and alleviated Aβ‑induced toxicity.

In the mouse model, oral arginine decreased amyloid plaque deposition and lowered insoluble Aβ42 levels in the brain. Arginine‑treated mice also performed better in behavioral tests and showed reduced expression of pro‑inflammatory cytokine genes associated with neuroinflammation. These findings indicate that arginine’s protective effects extend beyond simply slowing aggregation and may include broader neuroprotective and anti‑inflammatory actions.

"Our study demonstrates that arginine can suppress Aβ aggregation both in vitro and in vivo," Prof. Nagai is quoted as saying in a Kindai University release. "What makes this finding exciting is that arginine is already known to be clinically safe and inexpensive, making it a highly promising candidate for repositioning as a therapeutic option for AD."

The authors frame their work as an example of drug repositioning—repurposing existing, clinically used compounds for new therapeutic indications. Arginine is approved for clinical use in Japan and is considered to have a favorable safety profile and adequate brain permeability in the contexts in which it is already used. However, the researchers stress that the dosing regimens in this study were optimized for experimental purposes and do not correspond to commercially available supplements.

They also emphasize that further preclinical and clinical research will be necessary to determine whether the benefits seen in Drosophila and mice translate to people with Alzheimer’s disease and to establish appropriate doses and treatment protocols. The study, supported by grants from Japan’s Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology and other funding bodies, highlights a potentially cost‑effective path toward more accessible therapies targeting protein aggregation in neurodegenerative disorders.

Что говорят люди

Early reactions on X to the Kindai University study are sparse and mostly neutral shares of the ScienceDaily article, highlighting arginine's suppression of amyloid-β in fruit fly and mouse Alzheimer's models, with some mild optimism about its potential as a safe, low-cost supplement; no significant negative or skeptical opinions found.

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Illustration of a Brazilian researcher in a lab examining a rat, with screens showing brain scans and molecular structures, representing a new compound that reverses Alzheimer's-like deficits in rats.
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Brazilian copper-targeting compound reverses Alzheimer’s-like deficits in rats

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Researchers at Brazil’s Federal University of ABC report a simple copper-chelating molecule that reduced beta-amyloid–linked pathology and improved memory in rats. The compound showed no detectable toxicity in preclinical tests and, based on computer modeling, is predicted to cross the blood–brain barrier. The team is seeking industry partners for clinical development.

Researchers at the National University of Singapore have discovered that calcium alpha-ketoglutarate, a naturally occurring molecule, can repair key memory processes disrupted by Alzheimer's disease. The compound improves communication between brain cells and restores early memory abilities that fade first in the condition. Since it already exists in the body and declines with age, boosting it could offer a safer approach to protecting brain health.

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New research reveals that blood from younger mice can protect against Alzheimer's-like brain damage, while older blood accelerates it. Scientists conducted experiments infusing mouse blood over 30 weeks to observe effects on memory and protein buildup. The findings highlight blood's role in brain health and potential new treatments.

A study published November 5 in Nature reports that a small subset of microglia marked by low PU.1 and expression of the receptor CD28 can dampen neuroinflammation and curb amyloid pathology in Alzheimer’s models, pointing to microglia-focused immunotherapy. The work draws on mouse experiments, human cells, and analyses of human brain tissue.

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Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine report that raising levels of the protein Sox9 in astrocytes enables these brain support cells to remove existing amyloid plaques and preserve cognitive performance in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease that already show memory deficits. The findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, highlight astrocytes as a potential target for slowing neurodegenerative decline.

A large-scale genetic analysis of about 1.09 million people suggests that lifelong, genetically lower cholesterol—specifically non‑HDL cholesterol—is associated with substantially reduced dementia risk. Using Mendelian randomization to emulate the effects of cholesterol‑lowering drug targets such as those for statins (HMGCR) and ezetimibe (NPC1L1), the study found up to an approximately 80% lower risk per 1 mmol/L reduction for some targets. ([research-information.bris.ac.uk](https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/publications/cholesterollowering-drug-targets-reduce-risk-of-dementia-mendelia?utm_source=openai))

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Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis report that amyloid pathology in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease disrupts circadian rhythms in microglia and astrocytes, altering the timing of hundreds of genes. Published October 23, 2025, in Nature Neuroscience, the study suggests that stabilizing these cell-specific rhythms could be explored as a treatment strategy.

 

 

 

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