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Gene study points towards therapies for common brain disorders

Jan 2016: Professor Seth Grant and colleagues have published research that pinpoints the cells likely to trigger common brain disorders.

Professor Seth Grant and colleagues have published research that pinpoints the cells likely to trigger common brain disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, multiple sclerosis and intellectual disabilities.

The researchers used advanced gene analysis to investigate which genes were switched on in specific types of brain cells. They then compared this information with genes that are known to be linked to each of the most common brain conditions – Alzheimer’s disease, anxiety disorders, autism, intellectual disability, multiple sclerosis, schizophrenia and epilepsy.

Their findings reveal that for some conditions, the support cells rather than the neurons that transmit messages in the brain are most likely to be the first affected. Alzheimer’s disease, for example, is characterised by damage to the neurons. Previous efforts to treat the condition have focused on trying to repair this damage. The study found that a different cell type – called microglial cells  – are responsible for triggering Alzheimer’s and that damage to the neurons is a secondary symptom of disease progression.

Developing medicines that target microglial cells could offer hope for treating the illness.

The brain is the most complex organ made up from a tangle of many cell types and sorting out which of these cells go wrong in disease is of critical importance to developing new medicines.

Dr Nathan SkeneCo-Author

This approach could also be used to find new treatment targets for other diseases that have a genetic basis, the researchers say.

The study is published in the journal Frontiers in Neuroscience. It was funded by the Wellcome Trust and the European Union.

We are in the midst of scientific revolution where advanced molecular methods are disentangling the Gordian Knot of the brain and completely unexpected new pathways to solving diseases are emerging. There is a pressing need to exploit the remarkable insights from the study

Professor Seth GrantCo-Author and Principal Investigator

Related links

Professor Seth Grant Principal Investigator profile

Synaptic biology and disease research in CCBS