![drawing of the brain](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgITyXDMQvNayFbkN5smKxQ16HaVIagZMSCdga22LDSFZ6Nh5WajuWRyYRBFCu4tFtEMgvXFMAblshVwQNrwCEfnfgKjzbLXcdXy77-WxxVW_kBUpyjzvXl44Pak15u8IkpTww3/s320/brain_682x400_447748a.jpg)
The researchers also found that inhibitors of this protein currently used to control asthma could possibly be used to prevent or treat Alzheimer's disease.
The researchers published their findings in the Annals of Neurology.According to Domenico Praticò, an associate professor of pharmacology in Temple's School of Medicine and the study's lead researcher, the 5-Lipoxygenase enzyme is found in abundance mainly in the region of the brain, the hippocampus, involved in memory.
Praticò and his team discovered that 5-lipoxygenase, which unlike most proteins in the brain increases its levels during the aging process. It also controls the activation state of another protein, called gamma secretase, a complex of four elements which are necessary and responsible for the final production of the amyloid beta, a peptide that when produced in excess deposits and forms plaques in the brain. Today the amount of these amyloid plaques in the brain is used as a measurement of the severity of Alzheimer's.
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