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Bayard

(30,125 posts)
Thu Apr 30, 2026, 10:59 PM Thursday

Scientists restore memory by blocking a single Alzheimer's protein

Date:
April 30, 2026

Source:
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Summary:
Researchers have identified a new potential weapon against Alzheimer’s: blocking a protein called PTP1B. In mice, this approach boosted memory and helped brain immune cells clear harmful plaque buildup. Since PTP1B is also linked to diabetes and obesity—both risk factors for Alzheimer’s—it could offer a broader treatment strategy.

Alzheimer's disease is often described in numbers, with millions of people affected, cases rising quickly, and costs reaching into the trillions. For families, however, the experience is deeply personal. "It's a slow bereavement," says Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Professor Nicholas Tonks, whose mother lived with Alzheimer's. "You lose the person piece by piece."

A major focus in Alzheimer's research has been the buildup of plaque in the brain. This plaque consists of amyloid-β (Aβ , a peptide that forms naturally but can accumulate and cluster together over time. These deposits are widely believed to play a key role in driving the disease. Tonks, along with graduate student Yuxin Cen and postdoctoral fellow Steven Ribeiro Alves, has identified a new potential strategy. Their research shows that blocking a protein known as PTP1B can improve learning and memory in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease. Tonks first discovered PTP1B in 1988 and has spent decades studying its role in health and disease. In this latest work, his team found that PTP1B interacts with another protein called spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK). SYK helps control microglia (the brain's immune cells), which are responsible for clearing debris such as excess Aβ.

"Over the course of the disease, these cells become exhausted and less effective," says Cen. "Our results suggest that PTP1B inhibition can improve microglial function, clearing up Aβ plaques." Alzheimer's disease is also strongly associated with obesity and type 2 diabetes, both of which are recognized risk factors. These conditions are thought to contribute to the growing global burden of Alzheimer's. Because PTP1B is already considered a therapeutic target for metabolic disorders, this connection strengthens the case for exploring it in Alzheimer's treatment as well.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/04/260429102037.htm

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Scientists restore memory by blocking a single Alzheimer's protein (Original Post) Bayard Thursday OP
Where can I get this? Aussie105 Thursday #1
Yeah, they're still in mouse mode right now Bayard Thursday #2
I was going to be ... oldsoldierfadingfast Friday #3
There are plenty of us in the same boat as you.... AZ8theist Friday #4
I can remember names ... oldsoldierfadingfast Friday #5
Good point! calimary Friday #6
I thought she said "Feed your head". nt AnotherDreamWeaver Friday #7
Certainly could have been. calimary Friday #8
People would be amazed by the advancements in healthcare that are happening right now Ziggy Beans Friday #9

Aussie105

(8,123 posts)
1. Where can I get this?
Thu Apr 30, 2026, 11:13 PM
Thursday

Me, 77, wife 82, both need it!
(Wife more than me.)

Yes I know, human trials, FDA approval, etc.

Bayard

(30,125 posts)
2. Yeah, they're still in mouse mode right now
Thu Apr 30, 2026, 11:29 PM
Thursday

I'm always very interested in this subject, considering family history. If you go to the end of the article and look at titles of other articles, there are many related to this kind of research.

You may want to take a look at this study and magnesium.
https://www.neurology.org/doi/10.1212/WNL.0000000000004517

3. I was going to be ...
Fri May 1, 2026, 12:02 AM
Friday

flippant and ask if they could do research on those of us who do not have Alzheimer's; but, do have Some-heimer's -- where we know well the word we want to use; but, our brain can't find the right synapse to get it to our tongue. Or, when we mispronounce a word we said perfectly just a few minutes before.
However, this is a too important subject about which one should be flippant -- so I won't ask.

AZ8theist

(7,565 posts)
4. There are plenty of us in the same boat as you....
Fri May 1, 2026, 12:39 AM
Friday

My thing is remembering names. I've always had that problem, even as a young adult. It's frustrating. The brain is a funny thing; I remember inocuous BS from decades ago, yet can't remember what I did 2 days ago.

But I don't think you're being flippant. It's an important topic for those of us who are aging. Physical and mental decline are problematic. I recall playing golf with work colleagues a few years ago. One of the foursome wasn't a regular. After the round, we all hit the restraurant for lunch, and I pulled out my reading glasses to look over the menu. He commented "You need glasses to read this???
I just looked at him and said "Your day is coming, buddy. I just hope you remember what you said to me today".

If all I lose is my ability to read requiring glasses, then I'm ahead of the game.

5. I can remember names ...
Fri May 1, 2026, 12:55 AM
Friday

and I can remember faces; I just can't put the two together!
I also remember voices and can put a name to most of them.

calimary

(90,577 posts)
6. Good point!
Fri May 1, 2026, 01:41 AM
Friday

And yes, there’s nothing flippant about it. As we age. I bet there are many - um - “new introductions” happening, to many of us. To too many of us, probably.

Shit - I just thought back to the Airplane’s Grace Slick, singing “White Rabbit”, with the concluding lyric “…keep your head!” Could that perhaps have been what she meant?

Ziggy Beans

(39 posts)
9. People would be amazed by the advancements in healthcare that are happening right now
Fri May 1, 2026, 09:42 AM
Friday

In the next 3 to 10 years there will be numerous treatments, scans/tests, and cures for most diseases, including almost all cancers. And those highly effective treatments will have very few side effects. It will be a game changer for healthcare, much like antibiotics or anesthesia

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