This just in

On Yale & Yale alumni.
Ico print Print | Ico email Email | Facebook | | RSS

New drug reverses Alzheimer’s effects in mice

Yale scientists have reversed the effects of Alzheimer’s disease in mice with a new drug.

“A single dose of the drug results in improved cognitive function in mice,” lead author Paul Lombroso says in a YaleNews release. After receiving the drug, the test mice “were indistinguishable from a control group in several cognitive tasks.”

The new compound, TC-2153, results from a five-year search for drugs that block a protein called STtriatal-Enriched tyrosine Phosphatase (STEP), which interferes with learning and memory.

The team led by Lombroso, a professor in the Yale Child Study Center and in the School of Medicine’s departments of neurobiology and psychiatry, studied “thousands of small molecules” in their hunt for a STEP inhibitor, the release says. They’re now testing the compound on other animals, including rats and primates.

Their study was published August 5 in PLoS Biology.

___________________________________________

The Yale Alumni Magazine is published by Yale Alumni Publications Inc., an alumni-based nonprofit that is not run by Yale University. Its content does not necessarily reflect the views of the university administration.

Filed under Alzheimer's, School of Medicine
The comment period has expired.