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Alzheimer's Disease Research - Current Award

Dr. Marta Cortes-Canteli

Marta Cortes-Canteli, Ph.D.

Rockefeller University
New York , NY, United States

Title: Role of Fibrinogen in AD Neuronal and Synaptic Loss
Non-Technical Title: Blood Circulation and Neuronal Health in the Alzheimer's Brain

Acknowledgements: This project is supported by a generous bequest from the Richardson‐ Sargent Family Trust and the Richardson‐Sargent Credit Shelter Trust.
Duration: July 1, 2011 - June 30, 2013
Award Type: Pilot
Award Amount: $150,000


Summary:

The association between fibrinogen and Abeta affects normal hemostasis. Determining if fibrinogen also influences the neuronal and synaptic loss present in Alzheimer's disease is substantially important as it will support the design of therapeutic strategies aimed at blocking that association.

Details:

People who have Alzheimer’s disease can also have blocked brain blood vessels that accelerate problems with memory and other brain activities. In a previous AHAF grant, Dr. Cortes‐Canteli and collaborators showed that beta‐amyloid protein binds to the blood clotting protein, called fibrinogen, and prevents it from busting‐up clots. The resulting block in blood flow can lead to increased inflammation, loss of communication between nerves, and death in those parts of the brain. Moreover, decreasing the amount of fibrinogen has been shown to reduce memory loss in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease. In this project, Dr. Cortes‐Canteli will study mouse and human brain samples to determine whether fibrinogen is found in the same locations where nerve cells stop communicating. They will also treat Alzheimer’s disease mice with drugs that decrease fibrinogen levels to check whether the neurons communicate better once clots are removed and blood flow has been restored. It is extremely important to prevent neurons from dying, and this work will give clues on how to prevent it and will support the design of therapeutic strategies aimed at blocking or decreasing the blood clot formation observed in Alzheimer’s disease.

Publications:

Cortes-Canteli*, M., Paul*, J., Norris, E.H., Bronstein, R., Ahn, H.J., Zamolodchikov, D., Bhuvanendran, S., Fenz K.M. and Strickland. S. (2010) Fibrinogen and beta-amyloid association alters thrombosis and fibrinolysis: a possible contributing factor to Alzheimer's disease. Neuron 66, 695-709. *Contributed equally. Selected for issue’s cover. PubMed Icon Google Scholar Icon

Ahn, H.J., Zamolodchikov, D., Cortes-Canteli, M., Norris, E.H., Glickman J.F. and Strickland. S. (2010) Alzheimer’s disease peptide beta-amyloid interacts with fibrinogen and induces its oligomerization. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 107, 21812-7. PubMed Icon Google Scholar Icon

Investigator Biography:

Dr. Marta Cortes-Canteli is a research associate in the Laboratory of Neurobiology and Genetics at The Rockefeller University. She obtained her Ph.D. in biochemistry at the University of Madrid and performed postdoctoral work there for three years. She then obtained a postdoctoral position at The Rockefeller University where she was named a Women & Science Fellow. She later was awarded an Alzheimer's Disease Research Fellowship from AHAF. Her studies focus on one of the least known aspects of Alzheimer's disease: how blood circulation and blood clot formation affect the disorder.