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Green Tea Wards Off Alzheimer’s Disease And Other Neurodegenerative Conditions Say U-M Scientists

Wednesday, March 6, 2013 11:21
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Researchers at the University of Michigan have found a new potential benefit of a molecule in green tea: preventing the misfolding of specific proteins in the brain.

The aggregation of these proteins, called metal-associated amyloids, is associated with Alzheimer’s disease and other neurodegenerative conditions.

Green tea steeping 
File:Tea leaves steeping in a zhong čaj 05.jpg
Credit: Wikipedia

A paper published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences explained how U-M Life Sciences Institute faculty member Mi Hee Lim and an interdisciplinary team of researchers used green tea extract to control the generation of metal-associated amyloid-β aggregates associated with Alzheimer’s disease in the lab.

The specific molecule in green tea, (—)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate, also known as EGCG, prevented aggregate formation and broke down existing aggregate structures in the proteins that contained metals—specifically copper, iron and zinc.

“A lot of people are very excited about this molecule,” said Lim, noting that the EGCG and other flavonoids in natural products have long been established as powerful antioxidants. “We used a multidisciplinary approach. This is the first example of structure-centric, multidisciplinary investigations by three principal investigators with three different areas of expertise.”

Camellia sinensis, the tea plant

File:Organic mountain grown tea leaf.jpg
Credit: Wikipedia

The research team included chemists, biochemists and biophysicists.

While many researchers are investigating small molecules and metal-associated amyloids, most are looking from a limited perspective, said Lim, assistant professor of chemistry and research assistant professor at the Life Sciences Institute, where her lab is located and her research is conducted.

“But we believe you have to have a lot of approaches working together, because the brain is very complex,” she said.

The PNAS paper was a starting point, Lim said, and her team’s next step is to “tweak” the molecule and then test its ability to interfere with plaque formation in fruit flies.

“We want to modify them for the brain, specifically to interfere with the plaques associated with Alzheimer’s,” she said.

Lim plans to collaborate with Bing Ye, a neurobiologist in the LSI. Together, the researchers will test the new molecule’s power to inhibit potential toxicity of aggregates containing proteins and metals in fruit flies.

The tea fields in the foothills of Gorreana, Azores Islands, Portugal: the only European region to support green tea production.

File:Plantação de Chá Gorreana, Camellia sinensis, Ribeira Grande, ilha de São Miguel, Açores.JPG
Credit: Wikipeda

Other authors of the paper, all from U-M, are: Sanghyun Lee and Jung-Suk Choi of the Life Sciences Institute; Alaina DeToma, Suk-Joon Hyung, Akiko Kochi and Brandon Ruotoloa of the Department of Chemistry; and Jeffrey Brender, Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy and Subramanian Vivekanandan of the Department of Chemistry and Biophysics.

The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, Alzheimer’s Association, Alzheimer’s Art Quilt Initiative, American Heart Association, and a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation Study:http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/02/19/1220326110.abstract

Contacts and sources:
Laura J. Williams
University of Michigan



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