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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Maller J, George S, Purcell S, Fagerness J, Altshuler D, Daly MJ, Seddon JM. Common variation in three genes, including a noncoding variant in CFH, strongly influences risk of age-related macular degeneration. Nat Genet. 2006 Sep;38(9):1055-9. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Sharp Look at Complement in Genetics of Macular Degeneration

Comment by:  Tony Wyss-Coray
Submitted 1 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 1 September 2006

Complement is activated in most forms of neurodegeneration and in AD in particular. Aβ aggregates (the particular conformation of which is ill-defined) can activate complement and may trigger the clearance of Aβ in solution via C3bi and complement receptors (Mac1/CR3) on microglia. Similarly, tangle ghosts may be a trigger for complement activation.

It has also been suggested that injured cells or possibly Aβ aggregates bound to cell surfaces lead to activation of complement. This cell-bound activation of complement could lead to formation of the membrane attack complex (MAC) and further damage of cells, although studies in oligodendrocytes show that the MAC, which is a membrane pore, can also induce protective pathways in cells.

Factor H is involved in the regulation of the alternative complement pathway and may influence any of the above activities. If Factor H does indeed have a role in the degeneration of cells in the eye, it may have a similar role in the hippocampus and cortex as well. At this point, however, there is little hard evidence from in-vivo studies to...  Read more


  Primary News: Sharp Look at Complement in Genetics of Macular Degeneration

Comment by:  Ben Barres, ARF Advisor
Submitted 1 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 1 September 2006

The Complement System and Age-related Macular Degeneration: What Does It Teach Us about Alzheimer Disease?
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and Alzheimer disease (AD) are both neurodegenerative diseases of aging, with loss of photoreceptors and CNS neurons, respectively. A number of recent studies have shown that polymorphisms of several complement proteins in the alternative pathway of complement activation (CFB, C2, and CFH) enhance susceptibility to AMD. Somewhat similarly, in AD there is a profound increase in the levels of the initiating protein of the complement cascade called C1q, a prominent upregulation of which has also recently been reported to accompany glaucoma, which is a neurodegenerative retinal disease of aging. All of these changes, in AMD and AD, ultimately lead to activation of the pivotal complement protein called C3. Upon activation, C3 is fragmented into several pieces. One is called C3a, a small cytokine-like molecule that activates microglia and stimulates angiogenesis, whereas a larger fragment, called C3b, opsonizes the cell or debris...  Read more

  Primary News: Sharp Look at Complement in Genetics of Macular Degeneration

Comment by:  Carmela Abraham
Submitted 4 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 5 September 2006

The complement system plays important roles not only in the neurodegeneration seen in AD and AMD, but also during normal brain aging. We reported that the activation of the early components of the complement appears to target myelin and oligodendrocytes in the aged rhesus monkey brain. Interestingly, the complement activation was also observed in the young brain, but to a much lesser extent. These findings suggest that only an exaggerated complement activation is detrimental, but that low-level activation may be physiologic and could be crucial for the turnover of myelin (Duce et al., 2006.)

References:
Duce, JA, Hollander, W, Jaffe, R. and Abraham, CR. (2006) Early complement activation targets myelin and oligodendrocytes in the aged rhesus monkey brain. Neurobiol Aging. 27:633-644.

View all comments by Carmela Abraham

  Primary News: Sharp Look at Complement in Genetics of Macular Degeneration

Comment by:  Andrea Tenner
Submitted 7 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 9 September 2006

There is considerable data suggesting that complement plays a role in the progression of AD, including an animal model that we published in 2004. In that study, Tg2576 animals (APP) were crossed with C1q-deficient mice to effectively eliminate activation of the classical pathway of complement. The pathology of APPQ-/- was compared with that of APP mice and B6SJL controls at 3-16 months of age by immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis. While at younger ages (3-6 months) when no plaque pathology was present, no significant differences were seen; at older ages (12 and 16 months), the level of activated glia surrounding the plaques was significantly lower in the APPQ-/- mice. In addition, although Tg2576 mice showed a progressive decrease in synaptophysin and MAP2 in the CA3 area of hippocampus compared with control B6SJL at 9, 12, and 16 months, the APPQ-/- mice had significantly less of a decrease in these markers at 12 and 16 months. Interestingly, the APP and APPQ-/- mice developed comparable total amyloid and fibrillar β amyloid in frontal cortex and hippocampus. ...  Read more

  Primary News: Sharp Look at Complement in Genetics of Macular Degeneration

Comment by:  Amanda Myers
Submitted 9 September 2006  |  Permalink Posted 9 September 2006

Besides providing further evidence that the complement cascade is involved in neurodegeneration, these articles have broader implications for the field of genetics and disease mapping. Through a combination of linkage mapping (1-5) and association studies (6-8), the original reports declared that a tyrosine-to-histidine substitution at position 402 accounted for 20-50 percent of the overall risk of developing age-related macular degeneration (AMD). However, in the current reports, the coding change does not appear to have the largest effect. This has two implications for the field of neurogenetics. First, that it should not be assumed that examining single coding changes in genes is sufficient. With the recent boom in whole genome studies, this should no longer be as much of a problem for the field. But it does suggest that perhaps a re-examination of current association results is in order. Alzgene reports that after meta-analysis of 341 genes, 20 variants in 13 genes are significant. Approximately one-third...  Read more
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