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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Almeida CG, Takahashi RH, Gouras GK. Beta-amyloid accumulation impairs multivesicular body sorting by inhibiting the ubiquitin-proteasome system. J Neurosci. 2006 Apr 19;26(16):4277-88. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Related News
  Related News: Inside Out—Plaques May Have Intracellular Origin

Comment by:  John Trojanowski, ARF Advisor
Submitted 25 January 2010  |  Permalink Posted 26 January 2010
  I recommend the Primary Papers

These are very interesting studies of a topic that merits further investigation.

It is noteworthy that earlier mRNA expression profile data support this notion. Briefly, Steve Ginsberg and colleagues (Ginsberg et al., 1999) followed up on two of our prior studies showing that RNA is sequestered in AD senile plaques (Ginsberg et al., 1997) and that Aβ is detected inside neurons (Wertkin et al., 1993). Thus, Ginsberg et al. analyzed the mRNA profile in single immunocytochemically identified plaques in sections of AD hippocampus. By using amplified RNA expression profiling, polymerase chain reaction, and in situ hybridization, Ginsberg et al. assessed the presence and abundance of 51 mRNAs that encode proteins implicated in the pathogenesis of AD. He compared the mRNAs in amyloid plaques with those in individual CA1 neurons and the surrounding neuropil of control subjects. Remarkably, Ginsberg et al. demonstrated that neuronal mRNAs...  Read more


  Related News: Inside Out—Plaques May Have Intracellular Origin

Comment by:  Vincent Marchesi, ARF Advisor
Submitted 28 January 2010  |  Permalink Posted 28 January 2010

Two things about this study puzzle me. I don’t understand why the uptake of Aβ peptides by macrophages in culture necessarily mimics the development of plaques in the brains of AD patients, or why it is even a good model system.

The claim that internalized amyloid fibrils penetrate multivesicular membranes is a provocative one, but I question whether the immunostained, freeze-cleaved images that the authors provide are strong enough evidence to support this claim. To obtain these images, platinum-carbon replicas of cleaved cells were “washed” in SDS and then exposed sequentially to anti-Aβ antibodies and gold-labeled anti IGG. The assumption is made that the Aβ antigens in the cell adhere to the replicas, and remain in place during the washes and incubations. How much of the original antigenic material remains adherent to the replicas? Could some of it redistribute during the processing of the replica? The images of the vesicle membranes do not show obvious breaks, but these may be hard to recognize in these preparations. If such large clumps of amyloid fibrils do indeed...  Read more


  Related News: Inside Out—Plaques May Have Intracellular Origin

Comment by:  Virgil Muresan, Zoia Muresan
Submitted 28 January 2010  |  Permalink Posted 28 January 2010
  I recommend the Primary Papers

Two papers published recently in PNAS (1,2) touch an issue close to our hearts: the nucleation of neuritic plaques in Alzheimer disease. The most important issue about the seeded polymerization hypothesis (3) at this time is the nature of the “bad” seed that could nucleate polymerization of soluble Aβ below the critical concentration. Where does the seed originate? How is it produced? Several years ago, we proposed that these seeds are generated inside specific populations of neurons, and that they accumulate at the neurite terminals. We described a culture system where CNS-derived neuronal cells (CAD) accumulate within their neurites oligomeric Aβ (4). We also proposed that these Aβ aggregates somehow become extracellular (e.g., by cell death, or through fusion of Aβ-containing compartments with the plasma membrane), and provided evidence that the aggregates are indeed externalized (5). In this way, they could readily nucleate the polymerization of the soluble Aβ present in the extracellular space. The question was where the Aβ that we detected inside the neurites comes from....  Read more
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

We used the following antibodies: affinity-purified polyclonal Ab-42 antibody (1:200; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), early endosomal antigen-1 (EEA1) (1:100 (BD Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY); EGFR (1:1000, Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid, NY); EGFR (1:200, Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA); p1173 EGFR (1:1000, Upstate Biotechnology); TrkB (1:1000, BD Transduction Laboratories); tumor susceptibility gene 101 (Tsg101) (1:100, GeneTex, San Antonio, TX); microtubule associated protein 2 (MAP2) (1:1000 Sigma, St. Louis, MO); ubiquitin, (1:200 Chemicon); ubiquitin (1:100 Sigma); and a-tubulin (1:10000 Sigma).

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