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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Bero AW, Yan P, Roh JH, Cirrito JR, Stewart FR, Raichle ME, Lee JM, Holtzman DM. Neuronal activity regulates the regional vulnerability to amyloid-β deposition. Nat Neurosci. 2011 Jun;14(6):750-6. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Roberto Malinow
Submitted 6 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 6 May 2011

This is a very nice study. It provides further support that synaptic activity controls neuronal release of Aβ, and argues that synaptic activity may be the dominant factor controlling Aβ levels and plaque formation (rather than the recently proposed changes in Aβ removal). It will be very interesting in the future to correlate synaptic activity levels with Aβ release and plaque formation at a shorter distance scale (tens of microns).

View all comments by Roberto Malinow

  Comment by:  Samuel Gandy
Submitted 10 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 10 May 2011

The data here are beautiful and compelling, especially the demonstration of the temporal relationship between the accumulation of oligomers and the changes in interstitial fluid (ISF) lactate. Once again, the chicken-and-egg test shows that oligomerization is upstream of neurotoxicity, and not vice versa (although that relationship may become less black and white as the disease progresses).

I think that there are some details that may have been glossed over for the sake of the narrative:

1. “Neuronal activity” is described as though this were some homogenous, unitary phenomenon, when, in fact, the moment to moment, spatial summation of dozens of chemical signals arriving per second at the soma or at the synapse leads to highly diverse signaling and, in turn, a wide spectrum of Aβ40 and Aβ42 generation. I completely agree that this is not the whole story, but I would rank this as the determinant of some range of Aβ levels that will vary from one microenvironment to another.

2. Different signals are differentially amyloidogenic. The soma versus the nerve...  Read more


  Primary News: Do Overactive Brain Networks Broadcast Alzheimer’s Pathology?

Comment by:  Gunnar K. Gouras, ARF Advisor, Michael Lin, Davide Tampellini
Submitted 10 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 10 May 2011

Both the paper by Bero and colleagues and the Alzforum news story make a tacit assumption concerning the relationship between synaptic activity and β amyloid-related synapse dysfunction: that reducing plaque by reducing activity-driven secretion of Aβ is good for the brain. But is this assumption true?

As Bero and colleagues are aware, we reported last year in the Journal of Neuroscience (Tampellini et al., 2010) that deafferented barrel cortex causes reduced plaques in AD transgenic mice, findings now confirmed by Bero and colleagues. We then asked whether this plaque reduction in the setting of decreased synaptic activity was good or bad for synapses. Decreased plaques suggested it may be good, as Holtzman and colleagues posit. But there was reason to consider that reduced synaptic activity might actually be harmful to synapses, since in 2009 we published also in the Journal of Neuroscience that synaptic activation protected cultured neurons of Tg2576 mice against synaptic damage, even though Aβ secretion was increased, most likely because synaptic activity caused...  Read more


  Comment by:  Roberta Diaz Brinton, ARF Advisor
Submitted 6 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 10 May 2011
  I recommend this paper

  Comment by:  Zoia Muresan, Virgil Muresan
Submitted 12 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 12 May 2011

The Alzforum recently hosted a vivid Webinar that—among others—challenged the absolute supremacy of amyloid-β (Aβ) as the leading cause of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) neuropathology. Indeed, it is now accepted by an increasing number of investigators that AD-specific neuronal dysfunction and death could occasionally occur without being accompanied by the typical accumulation and aggregation of Aβ in specific brain regions. Yet, this hallmark of AD is still the one that unequivocally signals the presence of the disease for clinicians and investigators alike. Therefore, those who attempt to explain the AD process necessarily have to explain the accumulation and aggregation of Aβ in the AD brain. They also have to explain why these processes affect some—the so-called “vulnerable”—but not other, regions of the brain.

The present study elegantly explains—first of all—why Aβ pathology preferentially develops in the vulnerable brain regions, by showing that these vulnerable regions are those where basal neural network activity is highest. The study also shows that this is so...  Read more


  Primary News: Do Overactive Brain Networks Broadcast Alzheimer’s Pathology?

Comment by:  Adam Bero, David Holtzman, ARF Advisor
Submitted 14 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 14 May 2011

We would like to reply to comments by Gouras and colleagues regarding our manuscript. Gouras, Lin, and Tampellini state, “Both the paper by Bero and colleagues and the Alzforum news story make a tacit assumption concerning the relationship between synaptic activity and β amyloid-related synapse dysfunction: that reducing plaque by reducing activity-driven secretion of Aβ is good for the brain. But is this assumption true?” We must point out that we did not make the tacit assumption being stated in any way.

We would like to clarify the principal focus of our study: As deposition of amyloid plaques in specific brain regions is a fundamental feature of AD, we sought to elucidate the mechanisms that regulate brain region-specific amyloid deposition in AD. Using APP transgenic mice (Tg2576), we found that the steady-state level of neuronal activity in each brain region predicted interstitial fluid (ISF) Aβ levels and plaque deposition in a region-specific manner. We next found that physiological neuronal activity was sufficient to dynamically regulate ISF Aβ levels by acutely...  Read more


  Primary News: Do Overactive Brain Networks Broadcast Alzheimer’s Pathology?

Comment by:  J. Lucy Boyd
Submitted 11 May 2011  |  Permalink Posted 1 June 2011
  I recommend this paper
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