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Marijuana's Key Ingredient May Fight Alzheimer's Disease

Charles Q. Choi

Fox News

Thursday 05 Oct 2006

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The active ingredient of marijuana could be considerably better at
suppressing the abnormal clumping of malformed proteins that is a
hallmark of Alzheimer's disease than any currently approved prescription
drugs.

Scientists report the finding in the Oct. 2 issue of the journal
Molecular Pharmaceutics.

About 4.5 million Americans suffer from Alzheimer's disease, which
gradually destroys memory. As more people survive into old age, cases of
Alzheimer’s disease are expected to triple over the next 50 years. There
is no known cure.

The researchers looked at THC, the compound inside marijuana responsible
for its action on the brain.

Computer models suggested THC might inhibit an enzyme with the
tongue-twisting name of acetylcholinesterase (also called AChE) that is
linked to Alzheimer's.

AChE is known to help accelerate the formation of abnormal protein
clumps in the brain, known as amyloid plaques, during Alzheimer's.

This enzyme also helps break down the brain chemical acetylcholine,
which is linked to memory and learning. Acetylcholine levels are reduced
during Alzheimer's.

In lab experiments, the scientists found THC was significantly better at
disrupting the abnormal clumping of malformed proteins.

THC could completely prevent AChE from forming amyloid plaques, while
two drugs approved for use against Alzheimer's, donepezil and tacrine,
reduced clumping by only 22 and 7 percent, respectively, at twice the
concentration of THC used in the tests.

"We're not advocating smoking dope, but if we can make analogues of THC,
it could play a role in treating Alzheimer's," researcher Kim Janda, a
chemist at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif., told
LiveScience. "It would be nice to do more animal studies along these lines."

Past research on human brain tissues and experiments with rats have
suggested that synthetic analogues of THC can reduce the inflammation
and prevent the mental decline associated with Alzheimer's disease.

However, marijuana is not necessarily good for the mind.

Prior investigations have shown that years of heavy marijuana use,
consisting of four or more joints a week, can impair memory,
decision-making and the ability to pay attention to more than one thing
at a time.

Copyright © 2006 Imaginova Corp. All Rights Reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,218042,00.html
Molecular Pharmaceutics.http://pubs.acs.org/journals/mpohbp/index.html

 

 

 

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