Alzheimer's disease is an age-related memory disorder characterized by the accumulation of clumps of the toxic amyloid-β (Aβ) protein fragment in the extracellular space around neurons in the brain. Drugs that help to 'clean up' cells by inducing autophagy—the degradation of unnecessary cellular components—are known to lower Aβ levels within cells and have been shown to rescue memory deficits in mice. A team of researchers including Per Nilsson and Takaomi Saido from the RIKEN Brain Science Institute have now found that autophagy also plays an important role in secreting Aβ from the cell into the extracellular space.
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