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New 'Unifying Theory' May Explain How Alzheimer's Emerges in The Brain Health 05 April 2026 By Ivan Farkas (Maciej Frolow/Stone/Getty Images) The origins of Alzheimer's remain contentious, but a new study suggests the disease may emerge as two key proteins compete inside brain cells. Alzheimer's disease, the most common form of dementia, has long been associated with the build-up of two proteins in the brain: amyloid-beta and tau. This new study ties those two together, offering a " unifying theory " that, according to the team of chemists proposing it, resolves some conflicting ideas about Alzheimer's. Amyloid-beta peptides are sticky fragments of a larger protein that clump together to form plaques in the brains of people with Alzheimer's . These plaques, it's thought, can emerge some 20 years before symptoms appear. But some research suggests that tau tangles, knots of misfolded tau proteins that form inside diseased neurons, are a better indicator of cognitive status in Alzheimer's than amyloid-beta plaques. Normally, tau stablizes microtubules , the internal scaffold of cells, but in Alzheimer's disease, tau detaches from microtubules, clogging up cells. A visualization of the competition to bind to microtubules, shown in blue, by amyloid-beta peptides and tau proteins, shown in yellow and green, respectively. ( Ryan Julian/UCR ) These two hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease have been called into question in recent years , but they remain a major focus of research – with neuroscientists trying to figure out which forms first, what effect they each have, and if they truly do cause the disease or are just a symptom of it. "In addition to having dementia , [an] Alzheimer's diagnosis requires both [amyloid-beta] and tau buildup in the brain," explains Ryan Julian, a chemistry professor at the University of California, Riverside, and the study's senior author. "But many labs focus on the role of one and ignore the other." A healthy neuron and a diseased neuron, showing the hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease: tau tangles and amyloid-beta plaques. ( BruceBlaus/Wikimedia Commons ) To investigate, Julian and his colleagues conducted a series of protein binding studies, focusing on how amyloid-beta and tau interact around microtubules. Noticing that amyloid-beta peptides resembled, in sequence, the part of tau proteins that attach to microtubules, the team mixed the two proteins together in solution, along with tubulin , the building block of microtubules. "Our work shows amyloid beta and tau compete for the same binding sites on microtubules, and that [amyloid-beta] can prevent tau from functioning correctly," says Julian. Using fluorescently labeled amyloid-beta, the researchers could see when amyoid-beta peptides 'stole' the binding sites normally used by tau proteins. The researchers also 'tempted' amyloid-beta with another common protein, myoglobin, and found that amyloid-beta peptides still preferred binding to microtubules – meaning they weren't jus