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Annotation


Wahrle SE, Jiang H, Parsadanian M, Hartman RE, Bales KR, Paul SM, Holtzman DM. Deletion of Abca1 increases Abeta deposition in the PDAPP transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer disease. J Biol Chem. 2005 Dec 30;280(52):43236-42. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: ABCA1 Loss Lowers ApoE, Not Amyloid; New ApoE Immunology

Comment by:  Radosveta Koldamova, Iliya Lefterov
Submitted 21 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 21 October 2005

The newly proposed role for ApoE in lipid antigen presentation reported by van den Elzen et al. casts a new and interesting light on the results published by Hirsch-Reinshagen et al., Koldamova et al., and Wahrle et al.. Van den Elzen et al. show that ApoE binds directly to lipid antigens and delivers them into CD1-bearing dendritic cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis much more efficiently than macropinocytosis does. This process eventually leads to the production of interferon-Aγ and other cytokines. The results in the paper point to the presentation of foreign lipids (such as bacterial pathogens), whose role in the pathogenesis of AD is not well established [Editor’s note: see ARF Live Discussion ]. However, the presentation of endogenous lipid antigens such as sulfatide could be potentially very important in activating...  Read more

  Primary News: ABCA1 Loss Lowers ApoE, Not Amyloid; New ApoE Immunology

Comment by:  Radosveta Koldamova, Iliya Lefterov
Submitted 21 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 21 October 2005

In our study, we used APP23 transgenic mice in which human familial Swedish AD mutant is expressed only in neurons, and we demonstrate that targeted disruption of ABCA1 transporter increases amyloid deposition. The effect was manifested by an increased level of Aβ as well as thioflavin S-positive plaques in brain parenchyma. Moreover, the lack of ABCA1 considerably increased the level of cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) in APP23/ABCA1-/- mice. The fact that the elevation of the fraction of insoluble Aβ in old APP23/ABCA1-/- mice was accompanied by no change in soluble Aβ in young APP23/ABCA1-/- mice, and no difference in APP processing supports a conclusion that ABCA1 has a bigger impact on amyloid deposition than on amyloid production. Our data are in agreement with studies from Holtzman’s (12) and Wellington’s (5) groups. They demonstrated that ABCA1 deficiency in transgenic mice expressing human APP, harboring different FAD mutations and under the control of different promoters, increases amyloid deposition. In PDAPP mice (12) there was a considerable increase in insoluble Aβ...  Read more

  Primary News: ABCA1 Loss Lowers ApoE, Not Amyloid; New ApoE Immunology

Comment by:  David Holtzman, ARF Advisor, Suzanne Wahrle
Submitted 21 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 21 October 2005

Comment on the Wahrle et al., Koldamova et al., and Hirsh-Reinshagen et al. papers
Our laboratory and the laboratories of Iliya Lefterov and Cheryl Wellington reported on the effects of ABCA1 deletion on deposition of Aβ in four different mouse models of Alzheimer disease (AD). As shown in previous work from our lab and that of Wellington’s, deletion of ABCA1 leads to poor lipidation of ApoE and large reductions in ApoE levels in the plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, and brain parenchyma. Since mouse models of AD that have reduced or no expression of mouse ApoE develop significantly less Aβ deposition and also greatly reduced deposition of thioflavin S-positive Aβ, we expected that the decreased levels of ApoE present in ABCA1 knockout mice would lead to less Aβ-related pathology in ABCA1-/- mice bred to mouse models of AD. Contrary to this hypothesis, all three laboratories found that deletion of ABCA1 either has no effect or even increases Aβ-related pathology in four different mouse models of AD. These results indicate that the poorly lipidated ApoE produced by ABCA1-/-...  Read more

  Primary News: ABCA1 Loss Lowers ApoE, Not Amyloid; New ApoE Immunology

Comment by:  Veronica Hirsch-Reinshagen, Cheryl Wellington
Submitted 26 October 2005  |  Permalink Posted 26 October 2005

Three papers by Hirsch-Reinshagen et al., Koldamova et al., and Wahrle et al. (1-3) have now investigated the role of ABCA1 in Alzheimer disease neuropathology in vivo. Two very important findings were common to all three groups, demonstrating that these effects are robust and hold true across specific strains and particular animal models. Firstly, all groups corroborated prior findings of significantly reduced ApoE levels in the brains of ABCA1-deficient mice. Secondly, and contrary to all expectations, the ABCA1-mediated reduction of ApoE levels did not decrease amyloid formation, as would have been expected from previous studies showing that ApoE levels determine the extent of amyloid deposition in vivo.

All three groups reported that ABCA1 deficiency led to an 80 percent reduction in soluble ApoE levels, independent of mouse strain or AD model. Impaired ApoE secretion from both primary astrocytes and microglia has been shown to occur in ABCA1-deficient cells (4) and might partially explain this phenomenon. Additionally, increased catabolism of the poorly lipidated ApoE...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Mice heterozygous for an Abca1 deletion gene on a DBA background were obtained from The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME (strain name, DBA/1-Abca1tm1Jdm). Transgenic mice overexpressing human APP containing the V717F familial Alzheimer disease mutation on a C57Bl/6 background, referred to as PDAPP mice, were obtained from Lilly. The Abca1+/- and PDAPP mice were bred to one another for three generations to produce mice of all Abca1 genotypes that were hemizygous for the PDAPP transgene.

Antibody 3D6, an anti-Ab monoclonal antibody that detects Ab deposits was used for immunohistochemistry. Antibody to the C-terminal 22 amino acids of APP (Invitrogen) and anti-tubulin (Sigma) were used for Western blot probes.

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