University of Minnesota Alumni Association
 
Karen Hsiao Ashe
From Minnesota magazine, November-December 2005

HOPE FOR MEMORY LOSS
In a breakthrough that made news coast-to-coast, University of Minnesota researchers reversedmemory loss in mice genetically engineered to suffer brain atrophy similar to that caused by Alzheimer’s disease. The findings raise the hope that the same can someday be done for humans and also challenge assumptions about how the disease develops.

Led by Dr. Karen Hsiao Ashe, who created the “Alzheimer’s mice” almost a decade ago, researchers first isolated the gene that apparently causes brain degeneration and memory loss in Alzheimer’s. But after “switching off” that gene in Alzheimer’s mice and putting them through a maze, researchers found that memory loss in the animals hadn’t simply halted, their memory had significantly recovered. Further, this recovery occurred
Notes from Karen Hsiao Ashe's development of mice that mimic the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease. Image courtesy of LA Ink.
Notes from Karen Hsiao Ashe's development of mice that mimic the symptoms of Alzheimer's disease. Image courtesy of LA Ink.
even though tangles of proteins within brain cells, believed to be one of the primary causes of memory loss, remained intact. Now, researchers believe the tangles might be a protective reaction to the disease.”

Ashe, who holds the Edmund Wallace and Anne Marie Tulloch chairs in Neurology and Neuroscience, is now working to identify and understand the proteins that set off the tangle reaction, hoping to find treatments that could reverse some Alzheimer’srelated memory loss. Similar work is already under way on the proteins that cause plaque buildup between brain cells, believed to be the other major cause of memory loss.

The results were published in the July 15 issue of the journal Science.

Read more in "Nabbing the Thief of Memory" by U science writer Deane Morrison.