Twins Study Indicates Environmental Factors Significant in Alzheimer's Pathology

Twins Study Indicates Environmental Factors Significant in Alzheimer's Pathology
Twins Study Indicates Environmental Factors Significant in Alzheimer's Pathology

The question of genetic vs environmental influences plays a major role in research into brain ageing, with researchers from UNSW Sydney's Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA) revealing new insights into one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease - amyloid plaques - by looking at the brains of identical and non-identical twins.

The world first study, led by Dr Rebecca Koncz and published in The Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, used a special type of imaging called amyloid PET, or 'position emission tomography' to determine what proportion of amyloid accumulation is determined by genes, and what proportion is determined by environmental, or modifiable risk factors such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol.

"Amyloid is a protein that accumulates in the brain very early in the development of Alzheimer's disease," said Dr Koncz.

It is a hallmark feature of the condition that starts to accumulate decades before memory problems become apparent.

According to Professor Perminder Sachdev, Co-Director of CHeBA and Leader of the Older Australian Twins Study, twins provide a unique opportunity to investigate the relative importance of genetic and lifestyle factors for Alzheimer's disease, because monozygotic twins share 100% of their genetic material, and dizygotic twins share an estimated 50%. Australia has one of the world's leading twin registries - Twin Research Australia - members of which participated in the study. The amyloid PET imaging was done in collaboration with the Department of Molecular Imaging and Therapy, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, and the Department of Nuclear Medicine and PET at Prince of Wales Hospital in Sydney.

The researchers discovered that the heritability of amyloid is moderate - meaning genes play only a moderate role in determining the variation in amyloid build up in the brain.

This is significant, because it tells us that whilst genes are important, there is actually a major environmental contribution that may respond well to intervention. Dr Rebecca Koncz

"With respect to modifiable risk factors, we examined whether vascular risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, or a history of heart disease were significantly associated with amyloid burden or had any shared genetic basis," said Dr Koncz.

While the study did not find an association between vascular risk factors and amyloid, larger studies are required.

"Identifying modifiable risk factors will lead us to interventions that reduce the risk of amyloid accumulation - and ultimately risk reduction of developing Alzheimer's disease," said Professor Perminder Sachdev.

CHeBA's Older Australian Twins Study is a longitudinal study investigating healthy brain ageing in older twins over the age of 65 years. Healthy ageing is characterised by low levels of disability, high cognitive and functional capacity, and an active engagement in life. The most important ingredient of healthy ageing is a healthy brain, bereft of age-related diseases and dysfunction.

CHeBA Authors: Dr Rebecca Koncz, Dr Anbupalam Thalamuthu, Associate Professor Wei Wen, Dr Vibeke Catts, Dr Teresa Lee, Dr Karen Mather, Dr Jiyang Jiang, Professor Julian Trollor, Professor, Perminder Sachdev

COLLABORATOR AUTHORS - Vincent Dore, Melissa J. Slavin, Eva A. Wegner, David Ames, Victor L. Villemagne, Christopher C. Rowe

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