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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Masliah E, Rockenstein E, Veinbergs I, Sagara Y, Mallory M, Hashimoto M, Mucke L. beta-amyloid peptides enhance alpha-synuclein accumulation and neuronal deficits in a transgenic mouse model linking Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 Oct 9;98(21):12245-50. PubMed Abstract


Corresponding Author: Eliezer Masliah
  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Aβ Abets α-Synuclein

Comment by:  Benjamin Wolozin, ARF Advisor (Disclosure)
Submitted 8 October 2001  |  Permalink Posted 8 October 2001

α-Synuclein and β-amyloid: A Linking of Partners to Model Disease

Creating transgenic models of neurodegenerative disease has yielded mixed results. The transgenic models of Huntington's chorea and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis have yielded animal models showing a striking resemblance to their human counterparts (Davies et al., 1997; Gurney et al., 1994). On the other hand, developing transgenic animal models of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and synucleinopathies, such as Parkinson's disease or diffuse Lewy body disease, has proven to be difficult because mice that are transgenic for any single genes incompletely model these diseases. The steady march of progress has benefited the field, because the technique of combining transgenes appears has produced much more promising results. Most recently, a paper by Masliah and colleagues describes a mouse that carries transgenes for both amyloid precursor protein (APP) and a-synuclein, and that shows a striking resemblance to diffuse Lewy body disease (DLBD) (Masliah et al., 2001).

The evolution of transgenic models of...  Read more


  Comment by:  John Hardy, ARF Advisor
Permalink
  I recommend this paper

A fascinating study which further emphasises the parallels between tau andsynuclein pathobiology: mutations in both genes lead to pathology, haplotypes at both genes predispose to sporadic disease, both pathologies occur 'downstream' in Alzheimer's disease, and now, both pathologies are potentiated in APP mutant mice.

View all comments by John Hardy
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:
Heterozygous hSYN mice from line D (23) were crossed with heterozygous hAPP mice from line J9. The offspring were genotyped and analyzed at 4–22 months of age. hSYN and hAPP mRNA and protein levels were determined by RNase protection assay and Western blot analysis . Cells of the immortalized hypothalamic neuronal cell line GT1–7 (a gift from P. Mellon, University of California at San Diego) express neuronal markers. anti-hSYN (72–10, 1:200) anti-hAPP (clone 8E5, 1:1000, Elan Pharmaceuticals, San Francisco) anti-Ab(3D6, 1:600, Elan Pharmaceuticals) anti-choline acetyltransferase (ChAT; AB143,1:1000, Chemicon) anti-synaptophysin (SY38, 1:10, Chemicon) The specificity of immunostaining results was confirmed by incubating sections or cells overnight with preimmune serum or without primary antibody. For double-labeling, sections were incubated overnight at 4°C with anti-hSYN (1:1000), followed by detection with the Tyramide Signal Amplification-Direct (Red) system (1:100, NEN Life Sciences). Sections were then incubated overnight with anti-Ab(1:100), followed by incubation with FITC-conjugated avidin (1:75, Vector Laboratories). Confocal microscopy was carried out as described with a Zeiss 633 (numerical aperture 1.4) objective on an Axiovert 35 microscope (Zeiss) mounted on a MRC1024 laser scanning confocal microscope (Bio-Rad).

FUTURE DIRECTION:
It is not certain whether these effects were mediated by Ab or another hAPP product, these in vitro studies strongly suggest that Ab1–42 is the predominant culprit. It remains to be determined whether the neuronal deficits in these mouse models and the corresponding human diseases are dependent on fibrillar or prefibrillar forms of Ab and hSYN.

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