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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


O'Nuallain B, Freir DB, Nicoll AJ, Risse E, Ferguson N, Herron CE, Collinge J, Walsh DM. Amyloid beta-protein dimers rapidly form stable synaptotoxic protofibrils. J Neurosci. 2010 Oct 27;30(43):14411-9. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Torleif Hard
Submitted 2 November 2010  |  Permalink Posted 2 November 2010

The toxic aggregates of Aβ are no longer thought to be amyloid fibrils, the components of amyloid plaques, but smaller soluble oligomeric aggregates of Aβ, or larger, but still soluble, protofibrils, which contain smaller aggregates as building blocks. A major problem in research on Aβ aggregation is that there appears to be a multitude of soluble oligomeric species of which some might be toxic and others perhaps not. These are difficult to isolate from Aβ aggregation mixtures made in vitro. In particular, they are difficult to keep stable from further aggregation into (less toxic) amyloid fibrils, which are the endpoint of Aβ aggregation and which assemble into amyloid plaques. Hence, soluble Aβ aggregates are difficult to characterize in detail. As a result, several groups try different tricks to stabilize the correct (most toxic) aggregate to enable detailed studies of its properties (see, e.g., [1,2]).

A major contester for the role as building block of the penultimate toxic aggregate is an Aβ "dimer" which has been identified in CSF samples from AD patients (3). In their...  Read more


  Comment by:  Shaul Mukamel
Submitted 8 November 2010  |  Permalink Posted 8 November 2010

Considerable evidence has accumulated to suggest that water-soluble oligomeric forms of Aβ are the principal causes of the neurotoxicity in AD. Studying the structures and the formation pathways of these oligomers is thus of great interest. Since the oligomers and the intermediates along the aggregation pathways have finite lifetimes, there is an interest in designing mutants that can form more stable mimics of the wild-type intermediates.

The Aβ amyloid peptide follows different oligomerization pathways, depending on the length of the peptide. Aβ42 tends to forms fibrils faster and larger oligomers than Aβ40 (Bitan et al., 2003). Also, different types of Aβ peptides (Arctic [E22G], Dutch [E22Q], and Flemish [A21G]) exhibit different rates (usually higher than wild-type in several cases) of secondary structure formation. In fact, they are more stable than the wild-type peptide (see, e.g., Urbanc et al., 2010 and Fawzi et al., 2007). These...  Read more


  Comment by:  Todd E. Golde
Submitted 10 November 2010  |  Permalink Posted 10 November 2010

I remain agnostic as to what studies of in vitro toxicity tell us about pathogenic mechanisms in Alzheimer's disease. I think the data is unequivocal that dumping protein aggregates on neurons in culture is harmful, but it has been challenging to prove that this drives neurodegeneration in AD.

With that disclaimer, I have always been a fan of the kinetic model of toxicity. This model was first proposed based on experimental data in the manuscript by Wogulis et al. published by Russ Rydel and colleagues in the Journal of Neuroscience in 2005. This manuscript demonstrated in a quite convincing fashion that Aβ fibril growth was closely linked to and necessary for in vitro toxicity. The current manuscript by O’Nuallain and colleagues extend these data to dimeric assemblies and effects on LTP, but they do not cite this earlier work.

Indeed, the Wogulis manuscript is rarely cited in much of the current literature on Aβ toxicity, but in my mind, the Wogulis study is one of the more insightful papers on this subject. I simply suggest that anyone who studies toxicity of protein...  Read more

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