Brain's inability to repair DNA may explain dementia, memory loss
Date: Feb-10-2015 Previously, it was thought ability to repair DNA was the same throughout the
body, but new research overturns this idea and shows organs vary in the extent to which
they carry out a type of DNA repair called nucleotide excision repair.
The study investigated an important type of DNA repair.
This was the finding of a new study led by Nova Southeastern University (NSU) in Fort
Lauderdale, FL, that is published in the journal Photochemistry and
Photobiology.
For the study, the team investigated a type of DNA repair called nucleotide excision
repair (NER). It is one of five types of DNA repair used by mammalian cells, primarily to
repair damage caused by a range of cancer-causing agents, including ultraviolet (UV),
products of organic combustion, metals and oxidative stress.
NER is a complicated process that requires a high level of metabolic investment by the
cell. It mends DNA regions that contain unwanted added molecules that distort the DNA
helix and interfere with DNA copying during cell division.
Lead investigator Jean Latimer, associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the
College of Pharmacy at NSU, and colleagues found that the heart has the greatest ability
to repair DNA using NER, followed by the gut, the kidneys, the spleen, the testes and the
lungs.
However, the researchers found the brain appears to have no ability to carry
out this vital type of DNA repair.
One explanation could be that because they are not exposed to light, brain cells focus
their energies on more essential functions.
'Brain does not prioritize DNA repair'
Prof. Latimer says, "The human body was not designed to live past 30 or 40 years, so
our brains haven't prioritized DNA repair over other necessary functions."
"Our brains are frequently not physically prepared to last as long as medical science
is now allowing our bodies to live," she adds, and notes:
"These findings could help explain a root cause behind memory loss and
dementia."
For the study, the team carried out the research in mouse cell tissue cultures, but
they say - because of previous work they have done on human tissue - the same will be
true of humans.
The researchers used skin cells as the control to compare other cell types against.
They grew cells taken from different organs and assessed their ability to repair DNA
after exposing them to ultraviolet (UVC) light. UVC is a part of normal sunlight and
causes extensive DNA damage.
The authors note that loss of the NER type of DNA repair also occurs in
sporadic breast cancer and can influence response to therapy.
The National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health and the Ruth Estrin
Goldberg Foundation helped fund the study.
Meanwhile, Medical News Today recently learned of a study that suggests meditation may slow brain aging. Researchers from the
University of California-Los Angeles found that people who meditate regularly had better-preserved gray matter in the brain.
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
Courtesy: Medical News Today
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