POMEGRANATE DRUG TO AID ALZHEIMER'S , PARKINSON''S DISEASE
Dr Olumayokun
Olajide's research will look to produce compound derivatives of punicalagin for
a drug that would treat neuro-inflammation and slow down the progression of
Alzheimer's disease
The onset of
Alzheimer's disease can be slowed and some of its symptoms curbed by a natural
compound that is found in pomegranate. Also, the painful inflammation that
accompanies illnesses such as rheumatoid arthritis and Parkinson's disease
could be reduced, according to the findings of a two-year project headed by
University of Huddersfield scientist Dr Olumayokun Olajide, who specialises in
the anti-inflammatory properties of natural products.
Now, a new phase of
research can explore the development of drugs that will stem the development of
dementias such as Alzheimer's, which affects some 800,000 people in the UK,
with 163,000 new cases a year being diagnosed. Globally, there are at least 44.4
million dementia sufferers, with the numbers expected to soar.
The key breakthrough
by Dr Olajide and his co-researchers is to demonstrate that punicalagin, which
is a polyphenol -- a form of chemical compound -- found in pomegranate fruit,
can inhibit inflammation in specialised brain cells known as micrologia. This
inflammation leads to the destruction of more and more brain cells, making the
condition of Alzheimer's sufferers progressively worse.
There is still no cure
for the disease, but the punicalagin in pomegranate could prevent it or slow
down its development.
Dr Olajide worked with
co-researchers -- including four PhD students -- in the University of
Huddersfield's Department of Pharmacy and with scientists at the University of
Freiburg in Germany. The team used brain cells isolated from rats in order to
test their findings. Now the research is published in the latest edition of the
journalMolecular Nutrition & Food Research and Dr Olajide will
start to disseminate his findings at academic conferences.
He is still working on
the amounts of pomegranate that are required, in order to be effective.
"But we do know
that regular intake and regular consumption of pomegranate has a lot of health
benefits -- including prevention of neuro-inflammation related to
dementia," he says, recommending juice products that are 100 per cent
pomegranate, meaning that approximately 3.4 per cent will be punicalagin, the
compound that slows down the progression of dementia.
Dr Olajide states that
most of the anti-oxidant compounds are found in the outer skin of the
pomegranate, not in the soft part of the fruit. And he adds that although this
has yet to be scientifically evaluated, pomegranate will be useful in any
condition for which inflammation -- not just neuro-inflammation -- is a factor,
such as rheumatoid arthritis, Parkinson's and cancer.
The research continues
and now Dr Olajide is collaborating with his University of Huddersfield
colleague, the organic chemist Dr Karl Hemming. They will attempt to produce
compound derivatives of punicalagin that could the basis of new, orally
administered drugs that would treat neuro-inflammation.
Dr Olajide has been a
Senior Lecturer at the University of Huddersfield for four years. His academic
career includes a post as a Humboldt Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Centre
for Drug Research at the University of Munich. His PhD was awarded from the
University of Ibadan in his native Nigeria, after an investigation of the
anti-inflammatory properties of natural products.
He attributes this
area of research to his upbringing. "African mothers normally treat sick
children with natural substances such as herbs. My mum certainly used a lot of
those substances. And then I went on to study pharmacology!"
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