TITLE:
Molecular Lycanthropy:
Alzheimer's Disease and Protein Refolding
SPEAKER:
Professor David J. E. Callaway
TIME: Wednesday Mar. 6, 2002 at 4 PM
PLACE: George P. Williams, Jr. Lecture Hall, (Olin 101)
Investigator, North Shore/LIJ Research Institute
Clinical Investigator, Department of Neurology,
North Shore Hospital
As many as four million people in the United States
are incurably afflicted with Alzheimer's Disease (AD), a number that
is predicted to increase to 14 million by the middle of the
century. AD presently costs our
society over $100 billion annually, and is a leading
cause of death in this country.
It is widely believed that the aggregation of the
amyloid beta-peptide (Ab) into fibrils initiates
a cascade of events that lead to dementia and death.
The implied strategy of
curing or preventing AD by the inhibition of Ab aggregation
is therefore being pursued aggressively.
In spite of the widely-appreciated need for a systematic,
structure-based program for designing amyloid inhibitors,
little progress has been made towards this goal. No
high-resolution, three-dimensional structure of an amyloid
fibril is known, and the forces that drive Ab fibril formation
are not understood.
The determination of the molecular structure of Ab
fibrils is a significant goal, for it would lead to the
structure-based design of effective therapeutics for
AD. Formidable technical challenges have thus far
rendered this goal impossible by experimental
technology alone. We therefore
merge experimental technique with theoretical methodology.
We have initiated a program of research that involves
the direct design of amyloid fibrils themselves. By finding the
molecular motifs necessary for fibril formation, the
structural weak points of fibrils can be located.
This provides a sound basis for developing a detailed
molecular model from numerical simulation, and then
testing its precepts experimentally. This combination
of theory and experiment has led to the successful
prediction and testing of a promising new compound
for AD. It is expected that, by
continuing this interdisciplinary
program of theoretical and experimental
research, significant progress could be made towards
a cure for AD, and eventually towards a cure of the
roughly 20 other "prion-like" diseases that exhibit
similar pathology.