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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Neumann M, Sampathu DM, Kwong LK, Truax AC, Micsenyi MC, Chou TT, Bruce J, Schuck T, Grossman M, Clark CM, McCluskey LF, Miller BL, Masliah E, Mackenzie IR, Feldman H, Feiden W, Kretzschmar HA, Trojanowski JQ, Lee VM. Ubiquitinated TDP-43 in frontotemporal lobar degeneration and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Science. 2006 Oct 6;314(5796):130-3. PubMed Abstract, View on AlzSWAN

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Antony Horton
Submitted 9 October 2006  |  Permalink Posted 11 October 2006
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: New Ubiquitinated Inclusion Body Protein Identified

Comment by:  Julene K. Johnson
Submitted 12 October 2006  |  Permalink Posted 12 October 2006

From a clinical perspective, the identification of TDP-43 protein represents a major breakthrough in our understanding of both frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The TDP-43 is the mystery protein that is associated with the ubiquitin-positive inclusions that are commonly found in many patients with FTLD and in most, if not all, patients with ALS.

This finding is particularly important because several recent papers suggest that patients who have FTLD with ubiquitin inclusions at autopsy (FTLD-U) account for approximately 50 percent of all autopsy-confirmed FTLD cases (1-3). The remaining majority of FTLD cases are associated with the tau protein, but other neuropathological diagnoses exist. The finding that possibly one-half of all FTLD patients may have ubiquitin-positive neuropathology means that any breakthroughs in the biology of this protein could potentially translate into helping a large proportion of FTLD patients.

In addition, the finding that the TDP-43 protein is also found in patients with ALS further supports...  Read more


  Primary News: New Ubiquitinated Inclusion Body Protein Identified

Comment by:  David M.A. Mann
Submitted 12 October 2006  |  Permalink Posted 12 October 2006

In this paper, Drs. Lee and Trojanowski and colleagues have at long last identified the mystery protein hiding within the ubiquitinated inclusions that characterize certain histological forms of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), termed FTLD-U. This task has challenged neuroscientists for well over a decade, with all prior attempts at identification using immunohistochemical or biochemical methods proving fruitless. The culprit protein is a TAR DNA-binding protein, known as TDP-43. This protein is present within all the ubiquitinated structures in FTLD-U, viz., the neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, the neuronal intranuclear inclusions, and the neuritic changes, though whether this is the sole component of these structures (other than ubiquitin) remains uncertain. Some previous studies reported the presence of p62 protein within neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions, but such findings have been inconsistent. Moreover, Lee and Trojanowski have shown that the ubiquitinated neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions seen within spinal and cranial nerve nuclear motor neurons in motor neuron...  Read more

  Comment by:  Andre Delacourte
Submitted 16 October 2006  |  Permalink Posted 17 October 2006
  I recommend this paper

  Comment by:  Andrew Singleton, ARF Advisor
Submitted 16 October 2006  |  Permalink Posted 17 October 2006
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: New Ubiquitinated Inclusion Body Protein Identified

Comment by:  Tetsuaki Arai
Submitted 14 October 2006  |  Permalink Posted 18 October 2006
  I recommend this paper

Neumann, Sampathu, Kwong, and colleagues have resolved a long-standing issue in the research field of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). These authors have identified TDP-43 as a major component of ubiquitin-positive inclusions that characterize these disorders. They first extracted a fraction from the patients' brains using monoclonal antibodies and then analyzed it by mass spectrometry. Their findings have greatly facilitated the understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of FTLD and ALS.

Independently, we have also found TDP-43 as a component of the inclusions in FTLD [1]. Following electrophoresis of the sarkosyl-insoluble brain extracts from FTLD, Alzheimer disease (AD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), we have done exhaustive analyses by mass spectrometry. Following identification of each molecule that is more abundant in FTLD than AD/DLB, we have studied FTLD brain samples immunochemically and immunohistochemically. The antibodies to TDP-43 have immuno-stained neuronal inclusions and dystrophic neurites in the...  Read more


  Comment by:  Jason Eriksen
Submitted 9 October 2007  |  Permalink Posted 11 October 2007
  I recommend this paper
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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Antibodies used in this study included: 1) anti-ubiquitin antibodies: mouse, MAb 1510 (Chemicon), rabbit polyclonal antibody (DAKO), mouse MAb UbiB4 (unpublished, CNDR); 2)anti-tau antibodies: MAbs T14 and T46 (CNDR), mouse MAb PHF-1 (gift from Dr. P. Davies); 3) anti-TDP-43 antibodies: rabbit polyclonal antibody (ProteinTech Group); mouse Mab 2E2-D3 (Abnova), 4)anti-FTLD-U antibodies: MAbs 182 and 406, 5) anti-a-synuclein: rat MAb 15G7 and 6) anti-a-internexin (Zymed).

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