Single protein could dramatically alter trajectory of Alzheimer's disease

In people destined to get Alzheimer's in their mid-40s, one protein can delay the onset of the disease by about 20 years.

A woman wearing a blue tank top and jeans with long dark hair holds the arm of an older tan man wearing a gray shirt and a baseball cap as they walk down the street, their backs to the camera
A daughter holds the arm of her father, who has Alzheimer's disease. Many people in this region of Colombia have a gene mutation, called presenilin 1 (PSEN1), that leads them to develop Alzheimer's in their mid-40s.
(Image credit: RAUL ARBOLEDA / Stringer via Getty Images)

A single gene mutation protects against Alzheimer's disease in people destined to get the disease very young — and now we know why.

The gene mutation affects a protein called reelin that directs brain cells to shred the probable culprits in the disease — toxic amyloid plaques and tau tangles. The mutation makes reelin work much more efficiently, new research reveals.

RJ Mackenzie
Live Science Contributor

RJ Mackenzie is an award-nominated science and health journalist. He has degrees in neuroscience from the University of Edinburgh and the University of Cambridge. He became a writer after deciding that the best way of contributing to science would be from behind a keyboard rather than a lab bench. He has reported on everything from brain-interface technology to shape-shifting materials science, and from the rise of predatory conferencing to the importance of newborn-screening programs. He is a former staff writer of Technology Networks.

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