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Plants, bats magnify neurotoxin in Guam.


Researchers have turned up new evidence that a natural toxin that grows more concentrated as it moves up the food chain might have caused a puzzling spike in a neurodegenerative disease in Guam.

Starting in the mid-20th century, this disease--which shares traits with Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) (ā'mīətrōf`ik, sklĭrō`sĭs) or motor neuron disease,  (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease--began increasing among Guam's Chamorro people (SN: 5/17/03, p. 310). Last year, scientists proposed a new explanation: The presence of flying foxes, a type of bat, on the dinner plate rose with the availability of guns and then declined as the bats became extinct. Abundance of the delicacy exposed people to more of the neurotoxin beta-methylamino-L-alanine (BMAA) that comes from a local plant that these bats eat, researchers hypothesized.

Concentrations of the neurotoxin indeed rise "along the food chain, report ethnobotanist Paul Alan Cox Dr. Paul Alan Cox is a botanist whose scientific research focuses on the ecology of island plants and the ethnobotany of island peoples. Receiving his Ph.D. from Harvard University, he served for many years as professor and dean at Brigham Young University and later became King  of the National Tropical Botanical Garden The National Tropical Botanical Garden is a not-for-profit non-governmental institution. The institution is made up of major programs in scientific research, conservation, and education, and four gardens and three preserves in Hawai  based in Kalaheo, Hawaii, and his colleagues in the Nov. 11 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. . The bottom link of the chain was a surprise, though. Botanists had assumed that cycad cycad (sī`kăd), any plant of the order Cycadales, tropical and subtropical palmlike evergreens. The cycads, ginkgoes, and conifers comprise the three major orders of gymnosperms, or cone-bearing plants (see cone and plant).  plants, which look like palm trees, produce BMAA. But Cox and his coworkers Susan Murch and Sandra Banack found that the BMAA in these plants derives from nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria cyanobacteria (sī'ənōbăktĭr`ēə, sī-ăn'ō–) or blue-green algae, photosynthetic bacteria that contain chlorophyll.  that live in certain roots.

The cycads transport BMAA to tissues around their seeds, the researchers say. Murch also found the neurotoxin in brain tissue from disease victims in Chamorro. Intriguingly, the researchers also detected BMAA in brain tissue from two Canadians who died of Alzheimer's disease.--S.M.
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Title Annotation:Biology
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1U0GU
Date:Dec 6, 2003
Words:260
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