News Release

Pinpointing a culprit molecule in Alzheimer's disease

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Cell Press

One puzzle in Alzheimer's disease (AD) research is why mice engineered to have the abnormal protein underlying the disease in humans show little pathology of the disease. Specifically, such mice are genetically altered to overproduce mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP). It is this protein that, when clipped by enzymes, produces the amyloid beta (Ab) peptide that clusters into the amyloid plaque that clogs the brain and kills brain cells.

The clipping of APP produces two types of amyloid beta peptide--one 40 amino acid units long (Ab40) and one 42 units long (Ab42). Circumstantial evidence has suggested that Ab42 is the "stickier" of the two forms, and underlies the pathology of the disease.

Now, researchers led by Eileen McGowan and Todd Golde of the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine report in the July 21, 2005, issue of Neuron definitive proof that Ab42 is, indeed, the culprit molecule. In their experiments, they created transgenic mice that overproduced either Ab40 or Ab42 in the absence of overproduction of APP. Thus, they could precisely study the role of each of these molecules in AD pathology.

Their studies of the mice revealed that the Ab40 mice showed little amyloid disease pathology in the animals' brains, while the Ab42 mice showed extensive accumulation of amyloid plaque and resulting neural damage. What's more, when the researchers crossed the Ab42 mice with those producing mutant APP, they saw a massive increase in amyloid deposition that was more than the additive effect of the two mutations.

The researchers pointed out that test tube studies have shown that Ab42 aggregates more readily. "Thus, the simplest explanation for the complete lack of pathology in the [Ab40] mice would be the relative inability of Ab40 to initiate nucleation events capable of promoting amyloid deposition," they wrote.

One question the new transgenic mice might help address, wrote the researchers, is whether Ab peptide does damage inside brain cells or outside--"intracellularly." Transgenic mice produced by other researchers have not settled this question, because the peptide was not efficiently secreted by the cells in those mice. However, wrote McGowan and colleagues, "The [Ab] mice that we have developed are clearly distinct from these other "minigene" models in that they efficiently secrete Ab. To date we have little evidence for the accumulation of intracellular Ab in these mice; thus, they provide an excellent tool to study the effects of secreted Ab independently of APP transgenes."

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The researchers include Eileen McGowan, Fiona Pickford, Jungsu Kim, Luisa Onstead, Jason Eriksen, Cindy Yu, Lisa Skipper, M. Paul Murphy, Jenny Beard, Pritam Das, Karen Jansen, Michael DeLucia, Wen-Lang Lin, Christopher B. Eckman, Dennis W. Dickson, Mike Hutton, and Todd Golde of the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Jacksonville; Georgia Dolios and Rong Wang of Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York; and John Hardy of the National Institute on Aging, Bethesda. This study was supported by the National Institute on Aging, National Cancer Institute, and by the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer's Disease Research Center. Additional resources from the Mayo Foundation provided by a gift from Robert and Clarice Smith were used to support the Tg2576 mouse colony.

McGowan et al.: "Aß42 is Essential for Parenchymal and Vascular Amyloid Deposition in Mice" Publishing in Neuron, Vol. 47, July 21, 2005, pages 191–199. DOI 10.1016/j.neuron.2005.06.030. www.neuron.org


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