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Statins for Algernon: cholesterol-lowering drug fights learning disability.


In Daniel Keyes' 1966 novel Flowers for Algernon (Harcourt), an experimental treatment gives a mouse and a learning-disabled man increased intellectual abilities. Real-life researchers, too, have strived to develop effective treatments for learning-disabled people. Now, a study in mice suggests that a drug for high cholesterol Cholesterol, High Definition

Cholesterol is a fatty substance found in animal tissue and is an important component to the human body. It is manufactured in the liver and carried throughout the body in the bloodstream.
 may reverse learning deficits caused by a common genetic disease.

The disease, known as neurofibromatosis Neurofibromatosis Definition

Neurofibromatosis (NF), or von Recklinghausen disease, is a genetic disease in which patients develop multiple soft tumors (neurofibromas). These tumors occur under the skin and throughout the nervous system.
 type 1 (NF1), affects an estimated 1 in 3,000 people worldwide. Along with various physical symptoms, people with this disorder frequently have learning, memory, and attention problems. "Currently, there are no good treatment options for these people," says Alcino Silva of the University of California, Los Angeles UCLA comprises the College of Letters and Science (the primary undergraduate college), seven professional schools, and five professional Health Science schools. Since 2001, UCLA has enrolled over 33,000 total students, and that number is steadily rising. .

Research has shown that people with NF1 produce too much of a protein called Ras, which regulates how nerve cells communicate. Because the functioning of Ras requires fatty molecules called lipids, Silva and his colleagues wondered whether reducing blood-lipid concentrations might alleviate symptoms of NF1.

The team worked with adult mice, some normal and others genetically altered to develop NF1. The rodents all ate peanut butter pellets, some of which contained a dose of lovastatin lovastatin /lo·va·stat·in/ (lo´vah-stat?in) an antihyperlipidemic agent that acts by inhibiting cholesterol synthesis, used in the treatment of hypercholesterolemia and other forms of dyslipidemia and to lower the risks associated with , a commonly prescribed statin drug Noun 1. statin drug - a medicine that lowers blood cholesterol levels by inhibiting HMG-CoA reductase
lipid-lowering medication, lipid-lowering medicine, statin
 that lowers the blood concentration of the lipid known as cholesterol.

After several days of treatment, the researchers examined the animals' brains. The NF1 mice that had received lovastatin showed brain concentrations of Ras comparable to those of the normal animals, with or without lovastatin treatment. NF1 mice that hadn't received the drug had higher amounts of Ras in their brains than the other mice did.

Curious about whether lowering Ras in the NF1 mice could improve cognitive function cognitive function Neurology Any mental process that involves symbolic operations–eg, perception, memory, creation of imagery, and thinking; CFs encompasses awareness and capacity for judgment , Silva's team gave new groups of mice the same dosing regimens. After 3 months, the scientists subjected the animals to a bevy bevy

a flock of birds.
 of cognitive tests.

While NF1 mice that received lovastatin functioned much as normal mice on both treatment regimens did, NF1 mice that didn't receive the drug functioned far worse.

Silva and his colleagues report these findings in the Nov. 8 Current Biology.

The results imply "that we can rescue cognitive deficits ... even in mature patients," says study coauthor Robert Brown. "The thing we're really excited about is that we think this will be applicable in people."

However, David H. Gutmann of the Washington University School of Medicine Washington University School of Medicine, located in St. Louis, Missouri, is one of the most competitive and highly regarded medical schools and biomedical research institutes in the United States.  in St. Louis urges caution before assuming that lovastatin would benefit people, especially children. Previous research found that Ras plays an important role in wiring the brain during development.

Lowering the Ras activity "could have a great impact on the developing brain over years or decades of treatment. We need to learn more about the effects of long-term treatment in children," says Gutmann.
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Author:Brownlee, Christen
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 12, 2005
Words:440
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