He Was Expected To Get Alzheimer's 25 Years Ago. Why Hasn't He? (nytimes.com)
- Reference: 0179732170
- News link: https://science.slashdot.org/story/25/10/09/1913200/he-was-expected-to-get-alzheimers-25-years-ago-why-hasnt-he
- Source link: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/07/health/alzheimers-gene-mutation.html
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have studied Whitney for 14 years. They extract his cerebrospinal fluid and conduct brain scans during his periodic visits from Washington State. His brain contains heavy amyloid deposits but almost no tau tangles in regions associated with dementia. Tau accumulation correlates directly with cognitive decline. Whitney accumulated tau only in his left occipital lobe, an area that does not play a major role in Alzheimer's.
Researchers identified several possibly protective factors in Whitney's biology. His immune system produces a lower inflammatory response than other mutation carriers. He has unusually high levels of heat shock proteins, which prevent proteins from misfolding. Scientists believe his decade working in Navy engine rooms at temperatures reaching 110 degrees may have driven this accumulation. He also carries three gene variants his afflicted relatives lack. His son Brian inherited the mutation and remains asymptomatic at 43. Brian received anti-amyloid drugs in clinical trials. Researchers published their findings on Whitney in Nature Medicine. They described the study as a call for other scientists to help solve the case.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/07/health/alzheimers-gene-mutation.html
Obviously ... (Score:5, Funny)
> He Was Expected To Get Alzheimer's 25 Years Ago. Why Hasn't He?
... he forgot. :-)
Bake the fohgies! (Score:2)
> He has unusually high levels of heat shock proteins, which prevent proteins from misfolding. Scientists believe his decade working in Navy engine rooms at temperatures reaching 110 degrees may have driven this accumulation.
Let's try soaking geezers on saunas.
Oh wait, I'm a geezer too.
Re: (Score:1)
Correction: in saunas.
Geezer moment.
He was probably a weed-smoker (Score:2)
Somehow weed smokers seem to dodge all those bullets. I have 13 great aunts and uncles and the last one standing now is the biggest stoner. Everyone always thought he'd die early because he was always a fern burner. Nope. He's going to outlive us all.
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The biggest single factor in how long someone lives is genetic. What you do and what you are exposed to has an effect, but it is just a variation on top of your genetic predisposition.
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Genetics determines the maximum age you can reach. Diet, lifestyle, and pollution kill most people well before that.
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> The biggest single factor in how long someone lives is genetic
This sounds true but actually isn't. I've heard figures of 20-30% of outcomes attributable to genetics, the rest due to other factors. To be fair you did say it's a variation but it's the genes which are the noise on the signal / tail on the dog.
[1]The heritability of human longevity: a population-based study of 2872 Danish twin pairs born 1870-1900 [nih.gov] (identical twins == identical genes yet somehow different outcomes).
Once you accept that expression o
[1] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8786073/
Re: (Score:1)
Which is actually really cool from an evolutionary perspective. It allows for deeper solution of 'fitness maximisation' because runtime (environment, activities, cooperation with others) have an effect.
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Maybe being super-chilled the whole time had knock-on effects - no having himself reamed-out by cortisol for example.
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Username checks out.
Children (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but if I had such a genetic mutation, having kids would simply be out of the question. I'd adopt.
Re: (Score:1)
Going for a shower to wash off your slime :P