THE toxic effects of lead could be more far-reaching than we thought. Monkeys exposed to the heavy metal during infancy may be predisposed to develop the equivalent of Alzheimerās disease.
āWeāre not saying that lead exposure causes Alzheimerās disease, but itās a risk factor,ā says Nasser Zawia of the University of Rhode Island in Kingston, whose team discovered the link.
Zawiaās team fed baby monkeys infant formula milk laced with low levels of lead, then followed their progress until the age of 23. While the adult monkeys did not show symptoms of Alzheimerās per se, post-mortem analyses of their brains showed that the lead-fed monkeys had plaques and other abnormalities identical to those found in the brains of people with Alzheimerās.
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Whatās more, comparative analysis of RNA in their brains showed three key genes linked with Alzheimerās disease were 50 to 100 per cent more active in lead-fed monkeys than in those given uncontaminated milk as infants (The Journal of Neuroscience, ). The genes help generate the beta-amyloid protein found in brain plaques.
āThree key genes linked with Alzheimerās disease were 50 to 100 per cent more active in lead-fed monkeysā
Blood samples taken from the baby monkeys at 400 days and at regular intervals thereafter showed lead concentrations slightly above those considered safe in children by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Yet by the time the monkeys were three years old the lead had been excreted, leading Zawia to conclude the damage was done during the critical early period of life, rather than during adulthood.
Earlier experiments in rats and mice that did develop Alzheimerās-like symptoms after being exposed to lead as infants also suggested adult exposure did not put them at any increased risk of Alzheimerās.
Other researchers caution against overreacting to the findings. āThis study does not prove that exposure to lead in early life causes Alzheimerās disease,ā says Susanne Sorensen, head of research at the UKās Alzheimerās Society. āLead is well known to have a number of negative effects on cells, so itās not surprising some of these occur in the brain.ā She says more research is needed to investigate whether early life events can lead to brain changes that increase the risk.
Zawia agrees thereās no cause for alarm, particularly as much lead has already been removed from paint, petrol and other environmental sources. However, he says the findings reinforce the need to limit lead exposure, and highlight an unexpected hazard. āWe want to raise awareness that some environmental exposures could have delayed or masked consequences that become apparent later in life,ā he says.
Jackie Hunter, head of GlaxoSmithKlineās centre for neurology drug discovery in Harlow, UK, said the findings reveal how environmental and genetic factors might combine to alter susceptibility to the disease.
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