ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Scientists Just Watched Alzheimer’s Damage Happen, And Then Reverse It
You’ve
probably heard that Alzheimer’s involves sticky protein clumps forming in the
brain. But here’s what scientists have never been able to do, until now: watch it
happen in real time.
A team at Oregon State University, led by chemistry professor Marilyn Rampersad Mackiewicz, has done exactly that. And what they saw could change how we design treatments for one of the most heartbreaking diseases on the planet.
The Hidden Culprit: Copper
One of
Alzheimer’s key features is the buildup of a protein called amyloid-beta in the
brain. These sticky clumps disrupt communication between brain cells,
eventually leading to cell death. Scientists have known about this for years.
What they didn’t know was exactly how the
clumps form, step by step.
The OSU team used a specialized measurement technique to track how certain metals, especially copper, can trigger the clumping of amyloid-beta proteins second by second, in real time. This live, molecular-level view had never been achieved before.
Tiny Claws to the Rescue
The team didn’t stop at watching. They also tested molecules called
chelators, compounds that act like tiny claws, grabbing onto metal ions. One
chelator removed metals broadly, without distinguishing between helpful and
harmful ones. But another showed a strong preference for selectively binding
copper ions, thought to play a key role in Alzheimer’s-related protein buildup.
Here’s the remarkable part: when that copper was captured, the protein clumping didn’t just slow down. In the lab setting, it reversed.
Why This Matters
Many potential Alzheimer’s treatments have failed, partly because of an
incomplete understanding of how amyloid-beta aggregation actually occurs. By
seeing the process unfold live, and being able to measure exactly when and how
it can be interrupted, researchers now have what Mackiewicz calls “a roadmap
for creating more effective therapies.”
As she put it: “With the correct targeting, some of the brain damage might
be reversible.”
Clinical
treatments based on this work remain years away, but the shift this represents
is significant. It moves the question from “does
something work?” to “how does it
work, and when?” and that’s exactly the kind of precision
medicine needs.
Alzheimer’s affects tens of millions of families worldwide. Breakthroughs
like this won’t make headlines the way a cure would, but they’re often
the quiet, essential steps that get us there.
Journal
article: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsomega.5c11345
Source: Scientists Just Watched Alzheimer’s Damage Happen, And Then Reverse It – Scents of Science

