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		 Nobel 
		discovery opens window onto Alzheimer's disease 
		
		 
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		[October 07, 2014] 
		By Ben Hirschler 
		  
		 LONDON (Reuters) - The discovery of cells 
		in the brain that act as the body's internal global positioning system, 
		which won three scientists the Nobel Prize for medicine on Monday, opens 
		an intriguing new window onto dementia. 
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			 Since these spatial cells are among the first to be hit in 
			Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia -- explaining why sufferers 
			often lose their way -- understanding how they are degraded should 
			shed important light on the disease process. 
			 
			That is the belief of British-American researcher John O'Keefe, 
			winner of the 2014 prize alongside Norwegians May-Britt and Edvard 
			Moser, who plans to take his research to the next level as director 
			of a new brain institute in London. 
			 
			"We're now setting up to do much more high-tech studies where we 
			hope to follow the progression of disease over time," he told 
			reporters after hearing he would share the 8 million Swedish crowns 
			($1.1 million) prize. 
			 
			"This will give us the first handle as to when and where the disease 
			starts and how we can attack it at a the molecular and cellular 
			level." 
			
			  The battle against Alzheimer's has been long and frustrating. Global 
			cases of dementia are expected to treble by 2050, yet scientists are 
			still struggling to understand its basic biology and drug 
			development is littered with failures. 
			 
			The work by O'Keefe and the Mosers will not lead to immediate 
			breakthroughs but by explaining how cells function -- and then fail 
			to function -- in two very specific regions of the brain it is seen 
			as vital for unpicking how Alzheimer's develops. 
			 
			Dementia, of which Alzheimer's is the most common form, already 
			affects 44 million people worldwide and that number is set to reach 
			135 million by 2050, according to Alzheimer's Disease International, 
			a non-profit campaign group. 
			 
			"Understanding how the healthy brain functions, especially areas of 
			the brain crucial to learning and memory, is incredibly important in 
			understanding what changes occur during conditions such as 
			Alzheimer’s disease," said Doug Brown, director of research and 
			development at Britain's Alzheimer's Society. 
			 
			The Nobel Prize winners' work on the brain's navigation system 
			stretches back more than 40 years, but more recently scientists have 
			developed powerful new tools for studying brain circuits that 
			O'Keefe plans to put to work at the new London research institute 
			where his is director. 
			 
			
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			The first of more than 150 scientists will start work at the 
			Sainsbury Wellcome Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour at 
			University College London next year, using state-of-the-art lasers, 
			molecular biology and computational modeling to explore the brain's 
			intricate wiring. 
			 
			"It's a very exciting time," O'Keefe said. 
			 
			The Group of Eight leading industrial countries set a goal last 
			December of finding a cure or effective treatment for dementia by 
			2025. 
			 
			It is a decade since the last drug was approved to treat 
			Alzheimer's, and there is still no treatment that can slow the 
			progression of the disease, with current drugs only easing some of 
			the symptoms of the disorder. 
			 
			"We all know there is a time bomb there," O'Keefe said. "We are 
			starting to get a handle on it but that doesn't mean it is going to 
			turn into a cure in the immediate future." 
			 
			(This story has been refiled to fix typo in first paragraph; no 
			other changes to text) 
			 
			(Reporting by Ben Hirschler, Ediitng by Angus MacSwan) 
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