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Glutamate glut linked to multiple sclerosis.


Picture a crime scene at which a police officer is the criminal, indiscriminately killing bystanders who can't flee. Then, the rash officer calls in reinforcements, who not only shoot at passersby but poison some of them.

The berserk ber·serk  
adj.
1. Destructively or frenetically violent: a berserk worker who started smashing all the windows.

2.
 police are errant immune cells and their innocent victims are sheaths of a substance called myelin myelin /my·elin/ (mi´e-lin) the lipid-rich substance of the cell membrane of Schwann cells that coils to form the myelin sheath surrounding the axon of myelinated nerve fibers.  that surrounds axons--the impulse-carrying tendrils Tendrils is an irregular collaboration between noted Australian guitarists, Joel Silbersher and Charlie Owen (musician). A difficult sound to describe, Tendrils features two seemingly chaotic but strangely melodic and complementary, guitar parts and occasionally stripped back  extending from neurons, or nerve cells. Damaging myelin sheaths kills axons, resulting in the numbness, weakness, slurred speech, and paralysis of multiple sclerosis.

Two studies now indicate that a second wave of immune-cell carnage follows this initial mutiny. In this attack, immune cells produce copious amounts of glutamate glutamate /glu·ta·mate/ (gloo´tah-mat) a salt of glutamic acid; in biochemistry, the term is often used interchangeably with glutamic acid.

glu·ta·mate
n.
1. A salt of glutamic acid.
, a transmitter of neural signals. The overabundance o·ver·a·bun·dance  
n.
A going or being beyond what is needed, desired, or appropriate; an excess: teenagers with an overabundance of energy.
 wreaks havoc on nerve tissue nerve tissue
n.
A highly differentiated tissue composed of nerve cells, nerve fibers, dendrites, and neuroglia.
, overpowering the resident nervous-system cells that make myelin.

The new studies of rodents, which appear in the January NATURE MEDICINE, suggest that drugs that counter the action of glutamate might fight multiple sclerosis in people.

Immune cells arriving on the scene of myelin-sheath damage discharge glutamate routinely. It binds to receptor molecules on the surface of nervous system cells, which respond by taking it in. The myelin-producing cells, called oligodendrocytes, thus accumulate too much glutamate.

Unfortunately, these cells can't handle this much glutamate, says Peter Werner, a biochemist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
For the engineering company, see AECOM


The Albert Einstein College of Medicine (AECOM) is a graduate school of Yeshiva University. It is a private medical school located in the Jack and Pearl Resnick Campus of Yeshiva University in the Morris Park
 and Beth Israel Medical Center Beth Israel Medical Center is a hospital in New York City. It has four major locations providing health services. It acts as University Hospital and Manhattan Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University. , both in New York, and coauthor of one of the studies. The excess opens channels in the cell membrane and "can literally excite a cell to death," he says.

Using mice induced to have a condition similar to multiple sclerosis, Werner and his colleagues find that a drug that binds to glutamate receptors, preventing glutamate uptake, saves mice from neurodegeneration.

Comparing 20 mice given the drug, called NBQX, with 20 untreated mice, the researchers note that the treated mice retain the ability to use their hind legs and right themselves, whereas the other mice lose these functions.

In the second study, European researchers show similar success by blocking glutamate receptors. Rats and mice given any of four glutamate-receptor inhibitors, including NBQX, fended off the condition that mimics multiple sclerosis markedly better than untreated animals did, says Lechoslaw Turski, a pharmacologist at Solvay Pharmaceuticals in Weesp, the Netherlands, and a study coauthor.

The results "provide another avenue of potential therapy for multiple sclerosis," says Howard L. Weiner, a neuroimmunologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) is a hospital in the Longwood Area of the Boston, Massachusetts neighborhood of Mission Hill. With Massachusetts General Hospital, it is one of the two founding members of Partners HealthCare.  and Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. , both in Boston. "I think it's important work."

Scientists don't know why immune cells run amok or why myelin in particular attracts their wrath. Much work on multiple sclerosis has centered on these initial immune onslaughts, and scientists have discovered that immune cells release various toxic agents such as hydrogen peroxide. Yet these findings don't explain all the damage being done.

The new studies "suggest a whole other mechanism by which cell death might occur," says immunologist David S. Pisetsky of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. He finds the idea that heavy exposure to a substance as common as glutamate might kill cells "very intriguing."

NBQX worked well on the rodents, but it can cause kidney damage in people. In a study of patients who have had strokes, researchers are testing a version of NBQX modified to avoid this side effect. During a stroke, when the blood supply is shut off to part of the brain, neurons die and release glutamate. The NBQX derivative has shown signs of inhibiting living cells from taking up this excess glutamate and thereby suffering further damage, Werner says, but results are not yet published.
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Article Details
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Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jan 8, 2000
Words:588
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