Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Insulin Levels Drop With Progression Of Alzheimer's Disease, Linked To Tangles In Brain

Researchers at Rhode Island Hospital and Brown Medical School have
discovered that insulin and its receptors drop significantly in the
brain during the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, and that levels
decline progressively as the disease becomes more severe, leading to
further evidence that Alzheimer's is a new type of diabetes. They also
found that acetylcholine deficiency, a hallmark of the disease, is
linked directly to the loss of insulin and insulin-like growth factor
function in the brain.

The study, published in the November issue of the Journal of
Alzheimer's Disease (http://www.j-alz.com), is the first to look at
insulin levels early in the course of the disease. The authors'
previous work published earlier this year primarily focused on the
late stages of Alzheimer's.

"Insulin disappears early and dramatically in Alzheimer's disease. And
many of the unexplained features of Alzheimer's, such as cell death
and tangles in the brain, appear to be linked to abnormalities in
insulin signaling. This demonstrates that the disease is most likely a
neuroendocrine disorder, or another type of diabetes," says senior
author Suzanne M. de la Monte, a neuropathologist at Rhode Island
Hospital and a professor of pathology at Brown Medical School in
Providence, RI.

The study analyzed postmortem brain tissue of 45 patients with a
diagnosis of either normal aging or different degrees of Alzheimer's
neurodegeneration, termed "Braak Stages."

Researchers analyzed insulin and insulin receptor function in the
frontal cortex, a major area affected by Alzheimer's. They found that
with increasing severity of the disease, levels of insulin receptors
and the brain's ability to respond to insulin decreased markedly.

"In the most advanced stage of Alzheimer's, insulin receptors were
nearly 80 percent lower than in a normal brain," de la Monte says.

Researchers found two parallel abnormalities related to insulin in
Alzheimer's. First, insulin levels decline as the disease progresses.
Second, insulin and its related protein IGF-I lose their ability to
bind to corresponding cell receptors, creating a resistance to the
growth factors and thus causing cells to malfunction and eventually
die.

"This has important implications for treatment," de la Monte says. "If
you could target the disease early, you could prevent the further loss
of neurons. But you would have to target not just the loss of insulin
but the resistance of its receptors in the brain."

Researchers also offer an explanation for the acetylcholine deficiency
that is linked to dementia and has long been recognized as an early
abnormality in Alzheimer's. They found that insulin and IGF-I
stimulate the expression of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the
enzyme responsible for making acetylcholine. This discovery shows a
direct link between insulin and IGF-I deficiency and dementia.

"We're able to show that insulin impairment happens early in the
disease. We're able to show it's linked to major neurotransmitters
responsible for cognition. We're able to show it's linked to poor
energy metabolism, and it's linked to abnormalities that contribute to
the tangles characteristic of advanced Alzheimer's disease. This work
ties several concepts together, and demonstrates that Alzheimer's
disease is quite possibly a Type 3 diabetes," de la Monte says.

Earlier this year, de la Monte and co-authors provided the first
evidence that insulin and its related proteins are produced in the
brain and that reduced levels of both are linked to the late stages of
Alzheimer's.

They surmised that Alzheimer's is a complex neuroendocrine disease
that originates in the central nervous system, raising the possibility
of a new type of diabetes.

www.sciencedaily.com

Arrivato to acquire INTRUST fund business

Arrivato Advisors LLC, a New York-based investment management firm,
has agreed to buy INTRUST Financial Services Inc., an investment
advisory business of INTRUST Bank, the companies said on Wednesday.

IFS is investment adviser to The American Independence Funds, a mutual
fund complex with more than $600 million in assets.

A spokeswoman for Wichita, Kansas-Based INTRUST said the transaction
is expected to close in the first quarter of 2006, pending regulatory
approvals.

Rod Pitts, executive vice president of INTRUST Wealth Management, said
the company will continue to operate a wealth management business with
$2.7 billion in managed assets.

He said INTRUST decided to exit a mutual fund business that had become
subject to intricate regulation.

Arrivato said that it will take the name American Independence
Financial Services upon the close of the transaction.

Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

wwwtoday.reuters.com

Sun Pioneers Shift to Free and Open Source Software

Sun Microsystems, Inc. today announced two landmark moves in the
battle to create the software platform of choice for the
next-generation of the Internet. First, having seen tremendous
momentum with the Solaris(TM) Operating System (OS) as free and open
source software, Sun is making the Java(TM) Enterprise System, Sun
N1(TM) Management software and Sun developer tools available at no
cost for both development and deployment and further, is reaffirming
its commitment to open source this software.

Second, Sun is announcing that it is integrating all of this software
along with the Solaris OS into the Solaris Enterprise System, the only
comprehensive and open infrastructure software platform available
today.

With this announcement, Sun is creating the no cost and open
alternative to the Windows environment. The Solaris Enterprise System
has all of the benefits of an integrated offering while still enabling
customers the flexibility to address their requirements by deploying
the specific components they need into alternative operating systems.
In addition to being combined under a single distribution with the
Solaris Enterprise System, the Sun Java Enterprise System and the Sun
developer tools can be used at no cost on other existing
multi-platform environments including Windows, HP-UX and Linux.

Sun is also demonstrating its commitment to the developer community
and to the success of Sun's customers by working with its extensive
partner ecosystem to continue to deliver a full-set of advanced and
superior support services. The single, no cost distribution allows
developers and customers a risk-free way to get unencumbered access to
truly business-critical infrastructure software and then engage with
Sun at a point in the life-cycle when they need access to development
and deployment services. This significantly lowers their risk of
adoption and enables a dramatic increase in the number of companies
and individuals who can obtain a complete, integrated portfolio of
enterprise- class software.

"With more than 3.4M Solaris licenses and nearly one million Java
Enterprise System subscribers, customers and developers around the
world have asked us to take the next logical step -- combining the
world's fastest growing open source operating system with the world's
most complete and ready to deploy infrastructure software platform,"
said Jonathan Schwartz, President and COO of Sun. "100% of our
customers are deploying web infrastructures and asking for relief from
onerous licenses and system integration activity. With our announced
intent to open source the entirety of our software offerings, every
single developer across the world now has access to the most
sophisticated platform available for web 1.0, 2.0 and beyond."

Included at no cost in the new Solaris Enterprise System are:

* The award winning and open sourced Solaris 10 OS, with the recently
announced PostgreSQL database;

* The entire Sun Java Enterprise System infrastructure software
platform, including the Sun Java(TM) Identity Management Suite, Sun
Java(TM) Integration Suite, Sun Java(TM) Communications Suite, Sun
Java(TM) Application Platform Suite, Sun Java(TM) Availability Suite
and Sun Java(TM) Web Infrastructure Suite;

* The N1 Management Software including the Sun N1(TM) System Manager,
the Sun N1(TM) Service Provisioning System, the Sun N1(TM) Grid
Engine;

* All tools for C, C++ and Java development, including Sun Studio 11,
Sun Java(TM) Studio Enterprise 8 and Sun Java(TM) Studio Creator;

* SunRay(TM) Server software; * Sun(TM) Secure Global Desktop Software.

Sun is offering a risk-free opportunity to explore, develop and deploy
on Sun's pre-tested and pre-integrated software platform. This is a
complete platform which incorporates Sun's existing and recently
acquired technology, including its market-leading identity management
products, Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)-based integration and
composite application products from Sun's recent acquisition of
SeeBeyond, and the remote secure display capabilities from Sun's
acquisition of Tarantella.

Sun is also rolling out a vast number of new, complementary services
that span from early developer training and education to sophisticated
remote and managed services to automate processes that are currently
manually accomplished. Sun's new Customer Network Services can provide
administrators and developers with automated support for operations
management, including patches, upgrades, updates and warranty, without
the high-costs associated with professional services.

Sun has committed to open sourcing its entire software portfolio using
industry-standard open source licensing models to allow customers to
have easy and broad access to all of its source code.

Many of the components of Sun's integrated platform are already
available as open source, including the Solaris OS, the Sun Java(TM)
Application Server, the NetBeans(TM) software tools, and several key
underlying services like single sign-on capabilities and the ability
to connect multiple, independent applications in a standard way. This
is a trend where Sun continues to be a pioneer.

www.au.sys-con.com