These are an interesting set of papers, from two independent groups, that demonstrate the protective effect of ApoA-I against certain aspects of Aβ pathology in APP/PS1 transgenic mice. In the first paper by Lefterov et al. the authors took the approach of crossing APP/PS1 mice with ApoA-I KO mice and showed that this exacerbated the behavioral deficits of APP/PS1 mice. Most notably, the authors found that although the absence of ApoA-I had no effect on total brain Aβ levels, soluble Aβ oligomers, or parenchymal Aβ plaque load, there was a marked increase in cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA).
The second paper by Lewis et al. took the opposite approach of breeding APP/PS1 mice with transgenic mice expressing human ApoA-I. There, studies found the opposite result where the triple transgenic mice had improved behavioral performance and decreased levels of CAA. Furthermore, this study went on to show that in the presence of ApoA-I there was a decrease in glial activation and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. Together, these studies further suggest that in addition to its well-known cardiovascular effects, ApoA-I may also have profound effects in the CNS that may be important in the pathogenesis of AD.
On another point, I was particularly intrigued with how these two papers further support the concept studied in my lab, i.e. the relationship between CAA, neuroinflammation, and cognitive impairment. Earlier, we reported that cerebral microvascular amyloid deposition promotes neuroinflammation and behavioral deficits in the vasculotropic mutant APP mouse model Tg-SwDI (1,2). Reducing microvascular CAA in Tg-SwDI diminished the associated neuroinflammation, and this occurred in the absence of any changes in total Aβ load or the levels of soluble Aß oligomers (3).
This earlier finding is consistent with the present results of Lefterov et al. that show in the absence of ApoA-I worsening behavioral performance in the APP/PS1 mice was associated with increased CAA load, not the level of soluble Aβ oligomers. Moreover, specifically reducing CAA-induced microglial activation improved behavioral performance in Tg-SwDI mice further strengthening the link between CAA, neuroinflammation, and cognitive impairment (4).
These two papers indicate that ApoA-I fits as a protein that may be more specifically tailored towards the cerebral vascular contribution of AD and related disorders. First, Lefterov et al. show that ApoA-I hinders Aβ assembly into larger oligomeric/fibrillar structures and blocks their toxicity towards cultured human brain vascular smooth muscle cells. Proper assembly of Aβ is required for brain vascular smooth muscle cell toxicity (5,6). Second, ApoA-I may be intimately involved with efficient efflux of Aβ out of brain across the cerebral vasculature. Therefore, as the present two papers suggest, increasing or decreasing the expression of ApoA-I may have profound effects on the ability to clear Aβ at the level of cerebral blood vessel influencing the development of CAA. It would be interesting to determine what the plasma levels of Aβ are in these models with altered ApoA-I expression.
Finally, the anti-inflammatory properties of ApoA-I may directly suppress localized CAA-induced neuroinflammation. In any case, these two manuscripts support further investigation into the specific contribution of CAA to neuroinflammation and cognitive impairment and how endogenous molecules, such as ApoA-I, may influence these processes.
References:
1. Miao, J., Xu, F., Otte-Höller, I., Verbeek, M.M., Davis, J., and Van Nostrand, W.E. (2005) Cerebral microvascular Aβ deposition induces vascular degeneration and neuroinflammation in transgenic mice expressing human vasculotropic mutant AßPP. American Journal of Pathology 167:505-515. Abstract
2. Xu, F., Grande, A.M., Robinson, J.K., Previti, M.L., Davis, J., and Van Nostrand, W.E. (2007) Early-onset subicular microvascular amyloid and neuroinflammation correlate with behavioral deficits in vasculotropic mutant AβPP transgenic mice. Neuroscience 146:98-107. Abstract
3. Miao, J., Vitek, M.P., Xu, F., Previti, M.L., Davis, J., and Van Nostrand, W.E. (2005) Reducing cerebral microvascular amyloid β protein deposition diminishes regional neuroinflammation in vasculotropic mutant amyloid precursor protein transgenic mice. Journal of Neuroscience 25:6271-6277. Abstract
4. Fan, R., Xu, F., Previti, M.L., Davis, J., Grande, A.M., Robinson, J.K., and Van Nostrand, W.E. (2007) Minocycline reduces microglial activation and improves behavioral deficits in a transgenic model of cerebral microvascular amyloid. Journal of Neuroscience 27:3057-3063. Abstract
5. Van Nostrand, W.E., Melchor, J., and Ruffini, L. (1998) Pathogenic cell surface amyloid β-protein fibril assembly in cultured human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells. Journal of Neurochemistry 70:216-223. Abstract
6. Van Nostrand, W.E. and Melchor, J.P. (2001) Disruption of pathologic amyloid β-protein fibril assembly on the surface of cultured human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells. Amyloid 8:20-27. Abstract
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