Get Newsletter
Alzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a Cure Alzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a CureAlzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a Cure
  
What's New HomeContact UsHow to CiteGet NewsletterBecome a MemberLogin          
Papers of the Week
Current Papers
ARF Recommends
Milestone Papers
Search All Papers
Search Comments
News
Research News
Drug News
Conference News
Research
AD Hypotheses
  AlzSWAN
  Current Hypotheses
  Hypothesis Factory
Forums
  Live Discussions
  Virtual Conferences
  Interviews
Enabling Technologies
  Workshops
  Research Tools
Compendia
  AlzGene
  AlzRisk
  Antibodies
  Biomarkers
  Mutations
  Protocols
  Research Models
  Video Gallery
Resources
  Bulletin Boards
  Conference Calendar
  Grants
  Jobs
Early-Onset Familial AD
Overview
Diagnosis/Genetics
Research
News
Profiles
Clinics
Drug Development
Companies
Tutorial
Drugs in Clinical Trials
Disease Management
About Alzheimer's
  FAQs
Diagnosis
  Clinical Guidelines
  Tests
  Brain Banks
Treatment
  Drugs and Therapies
Caregiving
  Patient Care
  Support Directory
  AD Experiences
Community
Member Directory
Researcher Profiles
Institutes and Labs
About the Site
Mission
ARF Team
ARF Awards
Advisory Board
Sponsors
Partnerships
Fan Mail
Support Us
Return to Top
Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Herzig MC, Winkler DT, Burgermeister P, Pfeifer M, Kohler E, Schmidt SD, Danner S, Abramowski D, Stürchler-Pierrat C, Bürki K, van Duinen SG, Maat-Schieman ML, Staufenbiel M, Mathews PM, Jucker M. Abeta is targeted to the vasculature in a mouse model of hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis. Nat Neurosci. 2004 Sep;7(9):954-60. PubMed Abstract, View on AlzSWAN

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Study Poses Cautionary Question: Will Knocking Down Aβ42 Promote Amyloid Angiopathy?

Comment by:  John Fryer, David Holtzman, ARF Advisor
Submitted 18 August 2004  |  Permalink Posted 18 August 2004

The exciting data presented in the Herzig et al. paper provide key insights into some of the mechanistic differences in the deposition of the Aβ peptide in brain parenchyma vs. cerebrovasculature. Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis-Dutch type is an autosomal dominant form of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) resulting from a mutation within the Aβ coding region at amino acid 22. Expression of the human APP-Dutch transgene under control of the neuron-specific Thy1.2 promoter in mice results in almost exclusive deposition of the Aβ peptide in the cerebrovasculature, leading to smooth muscle cell degeneration, hemorrhage, and inflammation. Thus, this model recapitulates many key aspects of the human disease. Expression of wild-type human APP transgene resulted in mostly parenchymal plaque deposition as has been seen with expression of many of the APP mutations that result in familial AD. They also show that APP-Dutch mice have a higher ratio of Aβ40:Aβ42 as compared to the wild-type human APP mice. Crossing the APP-Dutch mice to mice expressing a mutant presenilin-1...  Read more

  Comment by:  Takaomi Saido, ARF Advisor
Submitted 26 August 2004  |  Permalink Posted 26 August 2004
  I recommend this paper

The work provides insights into the significance of conformational versus metabolic properties in the occurrence of pathological phenotypes, i.e., amyloid angiopathy versus parenchymal amyloidosis.

View all comments by Takaomi Saido

  Primary News: Study Poses Cautionary Question: Will Knocking Down Aβ42 Promote Amyloid Angiopathy?

Comment by:  Steven Greenberg (Disclosure)
Submitted 7 September 2004  |  Permalink Posted 8 September 2004

The beautiful series of papers by Jucker and colleagues begin to paint a picture of how cerebrovascular amyloid deposition (or CAA) might occur:

1. Neuronally produced Aβ peptide appears to have the opportunity to deposit in the brain parenchyma as plaques, to reach the vessel wall and perivascular space, and deposit as CAA, or to be cleared without depositing.
2. Various factors, including amount of Aβ, ratio of Aβ42:Aβ40, and pathogenic mutations within the Aβ sequence (among a host of factors involved in Aβ deposition and clearance) can predispose Aβ to deposit or be cleared.
3. For extensive CAA to occur, these amyloidogenic factors need to happen in exquisitely fine balance. Too much "amyloidogenicity" causes Aβ to deposit primarily as plaques; too little, and it is cleared without depositing. The E693Q APP transgenic mouse described in this paper appears to hit the CAA "sweet spot" with almost exclusive vascular deposition; addition of mutant presenilin tips the balance squarely towards plaque deposition.

Though clearly an oversimplification, it will be...  Read more

  Submit a Comment on this Paper
Cast your vote and/or make a comment on this paper. 

If you already are a member, please login.
Not sure if you are a member? Search our member database.

*First Name  
*Last Name  
Country or Territory:
*Login Email Address  
*Password    Minimum of 8 characters
*Confirm Password  
Stay signed in?  

I recommend this paper

Comment:

(If coauthors exist for this comment, please enter their names and email addresses at the end of the comment.)

References:


*Enter the verification code you see in the picture below:


This helps Alzforum prevent automated registrations.

Terms and Conditions of Use:Printable Version

By clicking on the 'I accept' below, you are agreeing to the Terms and Conditions of Use above.
 
 

REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Generated Dutch-mutant APP transgenic mice (mutation E693Q) using mouse Thy1.2 promoter, lines 23 and 33 used in this study (C57BL/6J-TgN(Thy1-APPE693Q). APPDutch/PS45 double-transgenic mice were obtained by crossing APPDutch mice with mice overexpressing human G384A-mutated presenilin-1 (PS1) under the control of the murine Thy1 promoter (B6,D2-TgN(Thy1-PS1G384A)45).

Ab was immunostained with rabbit polyclonal antibody NT12 (NT11) (gift of P. Paganetti). For specific staining of Abx–40 or Abx–42, used rabbit antisera R208 (R163) or R306 (anti-Ab R165), respectively (gift of P. Mehta). All Ab antibodies recognized both Abwt and AbDutch. Human APP (hAPP) was visualized with polyclonal antibody A4CT (specific to the C-terminal 100 amino acids of APP; courtesy of K. Beyreuther). Microglia and astroglia were stained with rabbit polyclonal antibody to ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule-1 (Iba-1) (courtesy of Y. Imai) and rabbit polyclonal antibody to glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, Dako), respectively. Double immunofluorescence labeling of Ab and smooth muscle cells was done for confocal microscopy. NT12 and mouse monoclonal antibody to a-smooth muscle actin (A-2547, Sigma) followed by goat anti–rabbit Alexa 568 and goat anti–mouse Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes) were used. Staining with Congo red, Thioflavin S and Perls' Prussian blue reaction for ferric iron was done according to standard protocols.

For Western blot analysis of Ab, mouse brains were immunoprecipatated with antibody 6E10 (Signet).

Sandwich ELISA:Ab was captured with Ab C-terminal monoclonal antibodies that recognize exclusively either Abx–40 (JRF/cAb40/10) or Abx–42 (JRF/cAb42/26) and are detected with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated JRF/Abtot/17, which is specific to the N-terminal 16 residues of human Ab48.

Print this page
Email this page
Alzforum News
Papers of the Week
Text size
Share & Bookmark
Desperately

Antibodies
Cell Lines
Collaborators
Papers
Research Participants
Copyright © 1996-2013 Alzheimer Research Forum Terms of Use How to Cite Privacy Policy Disclaimer Disclosure Copyright
wma logoadadad