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had a similar excess of cytokines, immune signal proteins that cause inflammation and -
sometimes - the death of neighboring neurons. Alzheimer's is a progressive, degenerative
brain disease that causes severe memory loss and eventually death. She speculated that
Alzheimer's disease occurs because of a cycle of cytokine-induced events in the brain,
beginning with the release of amyloid, a protein fragment that is deposited as plaques,
triggering release of more of these inflammatory cytokines. Interleukin-1 (IL-1) is chief
among these cytokines and has subsequently been shown to cause further release of the
plaque components, thereby propagating damage to an ever-expanding area of the brain. Griffin wondered, If an excess of the cytokines in the brain fosters
the development of Alzheimer's, and if the gene that produced that excess could be
identified, could scientists "catch" Alzheimer's early enough to prevent it?
Her idea was a departure from the conventional wisdom about
Alzheimer's disease. The leading researchers in the field, investigators at major
universities, were focusing on the hypothesis that amyloid plaques were themselves
directly responsible for damage to neurons. Funding agencies turned down Griffin's first
requests for research grants.
"My idea was met with a cacophony of boos and
guffaws," Dr. Griffin recalls now. A softspoken woman, Dr. Griffin chuckles when she
remembers the early rejection of her hypothesis. She tells younger researchers that if
they can't get funding for their wildest research ideas, to get funding for more
conventional projects and "plug away on that novel idea in your spare time."
Dr. Griffin is professor and vice chair of the Donald W.
Reynolds Department of Geriatrics in the UAMS College of Medicine and director of research
at the Geriatric Research Education Clinical Center at the Central Arkansas Veterans
Healthcare System.
After returning to her home state of Arkansas in 1986 as a
professor in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences (UAMS) College of Medicine, Dr. Griffin and her collaborators at UAMS first
established in 1989 that Interleukin-1 is, indeed, over-expressed in the brains of persons
with Alzheimer's disease. Just as importantly, they showed that IL-1 is over-expressed
throughout the progression from Down's syndrome to Alzheimer's disease. (Persons with
Down's syndrome typically develop Alzheimer's disease in later life.) Dr. Griffin and her
colleagues reported the "cytokine cycle" in 1992. Next, they identified the
variants of IL-1 genes that are associated with over-expression of the cytokine, B-amyloid
precursor protein, the potential linchpin in the cytokine cycle, in 2000. Today a fairly
rapid and inexpensive blood test can reveal the presence of those variants of IL-1.
Dr. Griffin and others also have shown that the
over-expression of IL-1 can trigger several phenomena related to Alzheimer's disease.
Scientists at several other universities have confirmed their discovery. Their findings
were very exciting because IL-1 can be regulated with readily-available drugs.
Scientists now widely accept her theory that this chronic
inflammatory response in the brain is an important factor in the development of
Alzheimer's disease. In recent years other scientists have confirmed in multiple studies
that individuals who take anti-inflammatory drugs regularly for other conditions are much
less likely to develop the disease than individuals who do not take the drugs. Even more
convincing, Dr. Griffin and her collaborators were able to show that people who have
certain DNA sequences in the gene for interleukin-1 are more likely to get Alzheimer's
disease. This finding was convincing evidence that interleukin-1 is a key factor in
development of the disease.
Dr. Griffin is currently focusing on how these discoveries
can help physicians stop Alzheimer's disease before its effects are severe. A
Massachusetts genetics firm has joined her to search for drugs that could prevent or delay
Alzheimer's disease. Interleukin Genetics (Nasdaq ILGN) will collaborate with Dr. Griffin
and UAMS to identify possible drug treatments for persons who are at risk of developing
Alzheimer's disease.
"Our idea is to detect the disease as early as
possible and then intervene with drug therapies or alternative treatments before it
reaches its very degenerative stages, so we can keep people functionally
independent," she explains. Dr. Griffin and Interleukin Genetics will use functional
genomics to determine how interleukin-1 gene variations alter inflammation in the brain,
leading to Alzheimer's disease. Genomics is a discipline that identifies genes, their
interactions, and their effects on biological processes. It promises to accelerate the
development of new approaches to treating human diseases. This information, together with
other genetic data, will be used to develop new drug therapies for individuals who have an
over-expression of Interleukin-1.
Today, Dr. Griffin tells audiences they can reduce their
risk of brain disease by having "a merry heart." She is co-director of the
Alzheimer's Disease Center at UAMS, a professor in the UAMS College of Medicine, and a
researcher at Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System. The National Institutes of
Health (NIH) have supported Dr. Griffin's work since 1991 with grants worth $17 million
through 2007.
An interdisciplinary research program on Alzheimer's
disease has grown up at UAMS since Dr. Griffin first showed that IL-1 is a linchpin in the
development of the disease. David A. Lipschitz, M.D., Ph.D., a South African geriatrician
with a charismatic style, directs the Donald W. Reynolds Center on Aging and is chair of
the department of geriatrics in the College of Medicine. Robert E. Mrak, M.D., Ph.D., has
collaborated with Griffin on the cytokine studies for 11 years. Steven W. Barger, Ph.D.,
joined the department in 1995 as the first faculty scholar of the Inglewood Foundation, an
endowment to UAMS aimed expressly at increasing its Alzheimer's disease research efforts.
Cornelia Beck, R.N., Ph.D., a leading researcher on preserving independence in old age,
directs the federally-funded Alzheimer's Disease Center at UAMS; Dr. Griffin is
co-director of the center, along with Victor W. Henderson, M.D., M.S., who leads its
clinical program. Charlotte Peterson, Ph.D., leads a research group that was the first to
report a possible link between muscle loss and fat gain that may point to ways to reduce
frailty in old age. John Hart, M.D., with co-investigators at Johns Hopkins University,
has proposed a novel explanation for how we recall memories for objects that surround us,
suggesting that objects occur in your memory by uniting the different brain regions that
make up various parts of the object you are trying to remember. William J. Evans, Ph.D.,
has developed a fitness program based on one that helps astronauts reverse the effects of
space travel. Sandra K. Pope, Ph.D., M.P.H., is studying the influence of dietary and
genetic risk factors on cognitive decline over time. Jeanne Wei, M.D., Ph.D., recently
left Harvard University Medical School to join the department as executive vice chair.
Drs. Griffin and most of these scientists are affiliated with the Geriatric, Research,
Education, and Clinical Core of the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, a program
that has fostered research on aging since the mid-1970s.
The university also has geared up to do more breakthrough
genetic studies. It collaborated with several other institutions in Arkansas to obtain $6
million from the NIH to create a network of high-powered research laboratories in the
small rural state.
Dr. Griffin's collaboration with Interleukin Genetics may
earn a profit for her and for UAMS, which trains many of the physicians, nurses,
pharmacists, and other health professionals in Arkansas. University leaders hope that
other high-tech health science research at UAMS will be an economic "engine" for
the state, stimulating local industry and creating high-paying jobs for new generations of
Arkansans.
Downloadable audio of Dr. Griffin is
available here: http://www.uams.edu/htyh/0701/alzheimers.htm
Related article about Dr. Griffins colleague, Charlotte
Peterson, Ph.D., is available here: http://www.uams.edu/today/2002/090502/cmresearch.htm
# # #
Contact:
Leslie W. Taylor
Phone: 501-686-8998
Wireless: 501-951-7260
e-mail: taylorlesliew@uams.edu
Elizabeth F. Shores
Phone: 501-686-8394
e-mail: shoreselizabethf@uams.edu
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