The Possible Role of Glow Sticks—Yes, Glow Sticks—in Treating Alzheimer’s A new imaging probe that could help advance therapies for Alzheimer’s disease draws its inspiration from an unlikely source. Research suggests that Alzheimer’s is closely associated with increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the brain, but actual, in vivo evidence of this has proved scarce. Now, the Martinos Center’s Chongzhao Ran and colleagues have looked to glow sticks—those luminescent plastic tubes favored by survivalists, ravers and young children on a warm summer’s night—in developing a means to detect and monitor ROS. Here’s how it works. In a glow stick, oxalate and hydrogen peroxide—a reactive oxygen species—are loaded into separate compartments. When you bend the stick, the barrier between the compartments breaks and the substrates are allowed to mix. The resulting chemical reaction produces the temporary luminescence. Similarly, in the imaging probe designed by Chongzhao and colleagues, oxalate reacts with ROS in the brain to produce a shift in the wavelength of the probe. The researchers can detect this shift with the imaging technique two-photon microscopy, thus making possible quantification of the ROS.
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