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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Hock C, Konietzko U, Papassotiropoulos A, Wollmer A, Streffer J, von Rotz RC, Davey G, Moritz E, Nitsch RM. Generation of antibodies specific for beta-amyloid by vaccination of patients with Alzheimer disease. Nat Med. 2002 Nov;8(11):1270-5. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: The Alzheimer's Vaccination Story, Continued

Comment by:  Dave Morgan (Disclosure)
Submitted 16 October 2002  |  Permalink Posted 16 October 2002

The paper by Hock et al from the Zurich group was very informative. Perhaps most interesting was the discussion regarding the one patient who had meningitis symptoms. This patient had antibody titers in CSF that equaled those in plasma, indicating a severe breakdown of the blood-brain barrier. It has been observed for some time that a subset of Alzheimer patients has blood-brain barrier breakdown. If this breakdown is found in most patients with the adverse response to the vaccine, it would permit screening out those individuals who would be at risk, and identify a subset of the population who might benefit from immunotherapy.

Importantly, the study also showed considerable variability in the antibody response across the individuals studied. Combined with the adverse events noted in 5 percent of the patient population, this would suggest passive immunization approaches—a reversible therapy with known amounts of antibody—would be the most prudent next step in testing the immunotherapy approach to AD. It might be most appropriate to only include patients with a patent blood...  Read more


  Primary News: The Alzheimer's Vaccination Story, Continued

Comment by:  Craig Atwood, Glenda Bishop, George Perry, ARF Advisor (Disclosure), Stephen Robinson, Mark A. Smith (Disclosure)
Submitted 16 October 2002  |  Permalink Posted 16 October 2002

Ever since Elan Corporation and Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories suspended their phase 2A clinical trials of a vaccine against Aβ42 (Check, 2002), researchers have been asking why an approach that was so successful in transgenic mice caused meningoencephalitis in some human patients (eg. Atwood et al., 2002a,b; Bishop et al., 2002; Munch & Robinson, 2002a,b; Smith et al 2002a,b,c). The Hock et al. and McLaurin et al. papers are bound to revive discussion about the immunization approach.

A potential reason why some AD patients developed an adverse reaction to the vaccine is that immunization with Aβ42 might have elicited a T-helper cell 1 (Th1)-mediated response, which in turn might have stimulated a pro-inflammatory reaction (Munch and Robinson, 2002b). McLaurin and colleagues (2002) reasoned that if an immunization regime could instead activate a Th2 response, which aids B-cells, a pro-inflammatory response could be avoided. In an earlier paper, the same team had immunized TgCRND8 mice with protofibrillar/oligomeric assemblies of Aβ42 and found that these mice showed a reduction...  Read more


  Primary News: The Alzheimer's Vaccination Story, Continued

Comment by:  Dale Schenk (Disclosure)
Submitted 16 October 2002  |  Permalink Posted 16 October 2002

Two recent papers on Aβ immunotherapy and Alzheimer's disease provide additional insight and both describe guarded optimism for the overall approach going forward.

The paper by McLaurin et al. describes a very careful, in-depth analysis of the antibodies generated against protofibrillar Aβ1-42 preparations. The paper shows that with this preparation, the predominant epitope targeted in the mice is Aβ 4-10. Furthermore, this purified antibody preparation is highly effective in both cellular toxicity models as well as in vivo. They also demonstrate that the predominant immunological response is Th2, which is often considered to be non-inflammatory in nature.

In the simplest interpretation, these findings suggest that antibodies against a small region of Aβ are sufficient to elicit all of the benefits seen with the Aβ1-42 immunization studies that have been previously reported (Schenk D., et al. Nature 400: 173 [1999], Morgan, D. et al. Nature 408: 982 [2000], Janus C. et al. Nature 408:979 [2000]. It is also important to note that immunization with a smaller fragment of...  Read more


  Primary News: The Alzheimer's Vaccination Story, Continued

Comment by:  David Holtzman
Submitted 18 October 2002  |  Permalink Posted 18 October 2002

Hock et al. show that in the human trial, in which subjects with AD were actively immunized with Aβ42, a percentage of these individuals develop anti-Aβ antibodies. The antibodies generated in this immunization protocol were predominantly against the N-terminus and many of them stain amyloid plaques, indicating they see Aβ in a β-sheet conformation. There was no evidence that the antibodies generated were against AβPP. They also did not see Aβ monomers on Western blots.

Whether the antibodies would immunoprecipitate Aβ under physiological conditions from body fluids such as CSF was not tested, so it is still possible that the antibodies could see soluble Aβ in solution. The titers of the antibodies in the plasma in some individuals were sometimes high > 1:10,000, and in patients without encephalitis with an intact BBB, the CSF titers were all 1:50 or less. This is consistent with the fact that the IgG that crosses that BBB is by passive diffusion and its amount is proportional to size of the molecule (usually   Read more


  Primary News: The Alzheimer's Vaccination Story, Continued

Comment by:  Curtis Dobson, Ruth Itzhaki
Submitted 28 October 2002  |  Permalink Posted 28 October 2002

We would like to add just two points—on aetiological and therapeutic rather than immunological aspects—to those of Robinson et al. Firstly, the paper by Hock et al. refers in the discussion to patients who developed "aseptic meningoencephalitis." However, Elan’s press releases refer only to "inflammation of the central nervous system." In fact, the term "aseptic meningoencephalitis" means inflammation of the brain and meninges not caused by bacteria. The most usual cause is viral. In view of Elan’s spokesman stating some months ago that no viruses (or bacteria) had been detected in the CSF of the affected patients, surely this needs clarification. Even more confusingly, Elan’s press release of January 18 stated that "…the presence of virus within the cerebrospinal fluid was reported in som(sic) of the four patients under investigation." When one of us then inquired which virus had been found in CSF, we were told by Elan that the virus was herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1), and that it had been detected by PCR—i.e., viral DNA had been detected, not the actual virus. In...  Read more

  Primary News: The Alzheimer's Vaccination Story, Continued

Comment by:  Beka Solomon
Submitted 18 November 2002  |  Permalink Posted 18 November 2002

The McLaurin et al. paper confirmed our findings that the key sequence for dissolving as well as preventing β-amyloid aggregates is the peptide 3-6 at the N-terminal of Aβ. I presented this at the 2000 International Alzheimer's Conference in Washington and then published in (PNAS). We finished the studies in transgenic mice one year later and submitted for publication in Vaccine in Dec 2001. The manuscript was kept for 10 months, and last month was accepted for publication with very minor revisions.

The Hock et al. paper is very important and timely, as it represents the first insight into the patients who received the vaccine. I don't agree with the data that these sera did not recognize the soluble monomers or oligomers of BAP. They bind to all conformations of AAβ, but not to APP.

Reference:

Frenkel D., I. Dewachter I, F. Van Leuven, B. Solomon. Reduction of β-amyloid plaques in brain of transgenic mice, model of Alzheimer's disease, by EFRH-phage immunization. Vaccine, 2002, in press.

View all comments by Beka Solomon

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Transgenic mice with pronouced b-amyloid pathology were generated by crossing male heterozygous APP(k670N/M671L) with female PS1 (M146L). Offspring were identified by PCR to detect APP transgene.

Perfused mouse brains were fixed and paraffin-embedded and tested for beta-amyloid plaques and vascular beta-amyloid with anti beta-amyloid 6E10 and monoclonal anti-amyloid-beta 4G8 (Signet). Human brain paraffin sections were incubated with human serum or CSF, and tested for human immunoglobulins with anti-human IgG and donkey conjugated Cy3 (Jackson Labs). For co-localization studies monoclonal 4G8 at final concentration of 3ug/ml was added to diluted human serum and detected by Cy2-conjugated donkey anti-mouse (Jackson labs). Both conventional and confocal microscopy was used to obtain images.

Cultured 293 cells (human embryonic kidney) were transfected with plasmid containing human APP(695)and a C-terminal HA tag. For living cell stainings, human pre-immune or immune sera was added to the cells to prevent internalization of antibodies. Positive controls used anti-beta-amyloid 6E10 or anti-6H1 (1:100). Rat anti-HA (Roche)was used for double staining with FITC-conjugated anti-rat IgG and Cy3-conjugated anti-human IgG as secondary antibodies.

Western blots of protein extracts from human or mouse brain were probed with human immune sera (1:100) or with anti beta-amyloid 6E10 ascites fluid (1:10,000)and detected with HRP-conjugated donkey anti-human IgG (Jackson Labs). Synthetic beta-amyloid 42 was obtained from Bachem.

ELISA assays were used to determine antibody titers by using Beta-amyloid 42 coated plates incubated with diluted serum samples. After washings they were incubated with goat anti-human IgG+IgA+IgM (H+L) (Jackson Labs) and detected with HPR and tetramethylbenzidine.

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