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By News Staff | January 1st 2008 10:21 PM | 2 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
Early exposure to environmental toxins can lead to diseases much later in life. This week, Wu et al. report that primates exposed to lead as infants showed Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-like pathology years later.

From birth to 400 d of age, monkeys were exposed to lead levels that produced no obvious sign of toxicity. Although by young adulthood blood lead levels in exposed monkeys were indistinguishable from those of controls, when examined at approximately 23 years of age, the brains of lead-exposed monkeys exhibited many hallmarks of AD, including Aâ plaques and neurofibrillary tangles, as well as increased expression of Aâ precursor protein (APP) and Sp1, a transcription factor that regulates APP expression. DNA methyl transferase I activity was reduced in lead-exposed monkeys, whereas oxidative damage to DNA was increased.

These results indicate that lead exposure early in life can predispose animals to later neurodegenerative disease, possibly through alterations in DNA methylation and oxidation.

Article: "Environmental Trigger for Alzheimer’s Disease", Jinfang Wu, Md. Riyaz Basha, Brian Brock, David P. Cox, Fernando Cardozo-Pelaez, Christopher A. McPherson, Jean Harry, Deborah C. Rice, Bryan Maloney, Demao Chen, Debomoy K. Lahiri, and Nasser H. Zawia

Comments

Has it ever been studied whether the toothpaste which pre WW11 was sold in LEAD tubes might have contributed to the increased Alzheimer's noted presently.
The path of introduction to bloodstream is pretty direct, mouth-gums absorbtion. And anyone who used tube toothpaste prior to about 1942 was most likely exposed. That would include anyone over about 69 years old.
Could that signal a decrease in Alzheimer's when the "Greatest Generation" has passed, or were their genes manipulated so the tendency was passed on to future generations?
Just got that connection made in my mind.

Kimberly Crandell's picture
Very interesting theory, Beth.  I had not heard that the toothpaste tubes originally contained lead.  That does seem to be worthy of investigating in light of a lead-Alzheimer's connection.  And of course they've eliminated lead in so many things in the past generation or so.  It will be curious to see if there is a dip in the percentage of seniors with Alzheimer's in the future as a result.

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