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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Ding Y, Qiao A, Wang Z, Goodwin JS, Lee ES, Block ML, Allsbrook M, McDonald MP, Fan GH. Retinoic acid attenuates beta-amyloid deposition and rescues memory deficits in an Alzheimer's disease transgenic mouse model. J Neurosci. 2008 Nov 5;28(45):11622-34. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Dietary Intake: New Results to Ponder on Vitamin A, Folate

Comment by:  Andrew McCaddon (Disclosure)
Submitted 9 November 2008  |  Permalink Posted 9 November 2008

Methylation and Tau
The wealth of reports in the last decade confirming an association between homocysteine and Alzheimer disease hint that disturbed methylation might somehow relate to AD pathology (Smith, 2008; McCaddon and Hudson, 2007). A link between impaired methylation and neurofibrillary tangle formation was first proposed by Scott and Vafai in 2002 (Vafai and Stock, 2002). In support of this elegant hypothesis Obeid et al. found an association between phospho-tau and the ratio of the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) and its demethylated product S-adenosylhomocysteine (SAH) in the CSF of 182 patients with various neurological disorders (Obeid et al., 2007).

SAH is a potent inhibitor of methyltransferase reactions, and last year Sontag et al. found that exposing neuroblastoma cells to SAH led to reduced methylation of PP2A (Sontag et al., 2007). Sontag’s group now show that folate deprivation downregulates PP2A carboxymethyltransferase expression in these cells, ultimately resulting in cell death. Protection is afforded by overexpressing either the...  Read more


  Primary News: Dietary Intake: New Results to Ponder on Vitamin A, Folate

Comment by:  J. Lucy Boyd
Submitted 12 November 2008  |  Permalink Posted 14 November 2008
  I recommend this paper

  Comment by:  Jungsu Kim
Submitted 17 November 2008  |  Permalink Posted 18 November 2008

To test if a retinoic acid can reduce amyloid deposition in vivo, the authors used the APPswe/PS mutant transgenic mouse model. It is unclear to me which mouse model was used in the current study. Although it was stated in the text that line85 APPswe/PS1delta9 mice were used, articles describing several other APP transgenic mice models, including APPswe/PS1M146L transgenic mice, were cited. The authors stated that the mouse model used in this study begin to develop amyloid plaques as early as 2.5 months of age. In our experience, line85 APPswe/PS1delta9 mice do not have any amyloid plaque at such an early age. It appears to me that authors used APPswe/PS1M146L mice, rather than line85 APPswe/PS1delta9 mice.

View all comments by Jungsu Kim

  Comment by:  George Perry (Disclosure)
Submitted 10 December 2008  |  Permalink Posted 13 December 2008
  I recommend this paper

  Primary News: Dietary Intake: New Results to Ponder on Vitamin A, Folate

Comment by:  Wolfgang Herrmann, Rima Obeid
Submitted 15 January 2009  |  Permalink Posted 15 January 2009

Tauopathies are a group of diseases characterized by accumulation of tau protein. Tau protein has a novel physiological function in the brain—stabilizing the neurons. Alterations in the amount or the structure of tau protein might destabilize the microtubules, thus causing changes in subcellular structures like the lysosomes (1) or the mitochondria (2). Tau can be structurally modified by phosphorylation, glycosylation, oxidation, and crosslinking. These pathological forms of tau tend to form self-aggregates and thus forming the neurofibrilary tangles (NFTs). NFTs are typical findings in all tauopathies containing paired PHF comprising hyperphosphorylated tau (3).

Alzheimer disease (AD) is the best known tauopathy that is characterized by accumulation of NFTs in the brain. In an animal model of neurodegenerative diseases, mice developed progressive accumulation of NFTs, neuronal loss, and memory decline (4). Suppressing the transgenic tau caused improvement in memory function, and neuron numbers stabilized. Unexpectedly, NFTs continued to accumulate. The authors concluded that...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:
Primary antibodies used in this study included:
Immunohistochemistry: monoclonal mouse anti-Aβ 42 (6E10)(Signet); rabbit anti-GFAP (Dako Cytomation); rabbit anti-Iba-I (Wako Pure Chemicals); rabbit anti-synaptophysin (Chemicon Millipore); rabbit anti-MAP2 (Chemicon MIllipore); monoclonal mouse anti-hnRNP-U (Santa Cruz Biotechnology)
Western blotting: monoclonal mouse anti-APP phos Thr668 (Cell Signaling Technology); rabbit anti-APP-CTFs (Sigma Aldrich); monoclonal mouse anti-p-tau Ser519 (Abcam); rabbit anti-p-tau (Ser235) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); rabbit anti-p-tau (Ser404) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); rabbit anti-p-tau (Ser396) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); rabbit anti-p-tau (Thr205) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); monoclonal mouse anti-CDK5 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); monoclonal mouse anti-p-CDK5 (Ser159) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); monoclonal mouse anti-GSK3β (Ser9) (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); monoclonal mouse anti-GSK3α,β Tyr279/216 (M132) (ECM Biosciences); rabbit anti-p35/25, C-terminal (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); rabbit anti-tau(Santa Cruz Biotechnology); rabbit anti-tau-1(Santa Cruz Biotechnology); monoclonal mouse anti-GSK3β (Sigma Aldrich); monoclonal mouse anti-β-actin (Sigma Aldrich) and monoclonal mouse anti-GFAP (Dako Cytomation)

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