A New Hope

Gene modeling reveals most promising Alzheimer's interventions to date

Spring 2024
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Rui Chang

Rui Chang

Photo: Kris Hanning


University of Arizona researchers have, for the first time, shown that big data and advanced computing could unlock a way to treat and even prevent Alzheimer’s disease. The next step: human trials funded by the National Institutes of Health. 

With more than 2,000 samples from a national database of brain tissue from patients who had Alzheimer’s, Rui Chang, associate professor in the College of Medicine – Tucson, created an algorithm that integrates today’s vast but disconnected knowledge of genetics and molecular processes to create a brain model unlike any other. It allows scientists to see how gene changes at one point in time trigger divergent chain reactions and downstream effects.

The tool revealed 19 genes that, when undergoing changes upstream, lead to downstream amyloid plaques and tau tangles in the brain — hallmark symptoms of Alzheimer’s. Collaborators at Harvard University confirmed that effect in the lab, validating the genes as treatment targets. 

Chang then used 3D computer models to rapidly identify 3,000 federally approved drug compounds that “fit” those target genes, not unlike the way keys fit certain locks. Clinical trials will now offer the first tests to discover whether any of those compounds could prove the key that not only improves Alzheimer’s symptoms but can even prevent the disease.


 

Data Connects Us

The Data Connects Us series is published in partnership with the university's Office of Research, Innovation & Impact (RII) and the Institute for Computation & Data-Enabled Insight. RII content was written by Eric Van Meter and originally published in the RII Magazine in December 2023 based on reporting by Rosemary Brandt, Logan Burtch-Buus, Anna Christensen, Emily Dieckman, Mikayla Mace Kelley, Susan McGinley, Kimberly Nichols and Niranjana Rajalakshmi.

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