Searched for: person:nixonr01 or ginsbs01 or levye01 or mathep01 or ohnom01 or raom01 or scharh01 or yangd02 or yuana01
Presenilin mutations in familial Alzheimer disease and transgenic mouse models accelerate neuronal lysosomal pathology
Cataldo, Anne M; Peterhoff, Corrinne M; Schmidt, Stephen D; Terio, Nicole B; Duff, Karen; Beard, Margaret; Mathews, Paul M; Nixon, Ralph A
The neuronal lysosomal system is a major degradative pathway, induced by cell stress and closely linked to Alzheimer disease (AD) and other neurodegenerative diseases. Here, we show that mutations of presenilin (PS) 1 and 2, which cause familial early-onset AD (FAD), induce more severe lysosomal system neuropathology in humans than does sporadic AD (SAD). Cathepsin D and B levels were higher in PS-FAD neocortex than in SAD and, unlike neurons in SAD, expressed higher levels of the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor. Lysosomal pathology was also evident in more populations of neurons in PS-FAD brains, including the less vulnerable neurons in laminae II and IV and affected neurons contained high numbers of hydrolase-positive vesicular compartments with a broader range of abnormal morphology. In transgenic mice expressing mutant amyloid precursor protein (APPswe), introducing mutant PSI significantly upregulated the lysosomal system in neocortical and hippocampal neurons. This upregulation, though milder in severity, resembled that seen in human PS-FAD. Accumulation of hydrolases in dystrophic neurites in senile plaques was particularly strong, suggesting that amyloid deposition may be a stimulus for local mobilization of the lysosomal system. PS1 mice lacking the APPswe transgene also had a mild lysosomal response in some neuronal populations, which was not seen in the APPswe mice. Our findings suggest that presenilin mutations have amyloid-independent effects on the lysosomal system, which are synergistic with the lysosomal system pathology that is associated with beta-amyloid
PMID: 15330337
ISSN: 0022-3069
CID: 95397
Effect of anti-inflammatory agents on transforming growth factor beta over-expressing mouse brains: a model revised
Lacombe P; Mathews PM; Schmidt SD; Breidert T; Heneka MT; Landreth GE; Feinstein DL; Galea E
BACKGROUND: The over-expression of transforming growth factor beta-1(TGF-beta1) has been reported to cause hydrocephalus, glia activation, and vascular amyloidbeta (Abeta) deposition in mouse brains. Since these phenomena partially mimic the cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) concomitant to Alzheimer's disease, the findings in TGF-beta1 over-expressing mice prompted the hypothesis that CAA could be caused or enhanced by the abnormal production of TGF-beta1. This idea was in accordance with the view that chronic inflammation contributes to Alzheimer's disease, and drew attention to the therapeutic potential of anti-inflammatory drugs for the treatment of Abeta-elicited CAA. We thus studied the effect of anti-inflammatory drug administration in TGF-beta1-induced pathology. METHODS: Two-month-old TGF-beta1 mice and littermate controls were orally administered pioglitazone, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma agonist, or ibuprofen, a non steroidal anti-inflammatory agent, for two months. Glia activation was assessed by immunohistochemistry and western blot analysis; Abeta precursor protein (APP) by western blot analysis; Abeta deposition by immunohistochemistry, thioflavin-S staining and ELISA; and hydrocephalus by measurements of ventricle size on autoradiographies of brain sections. Results are expressed as means +/- SD. Data comparisons were carried with the Student's T test when two groups were compared, or ANOVA analysis when more than three groups were analyzed. RESULTS: Animals displayed glia activation, hydrocephalus and a robust thioflavin-S-positive vascular deposition. Unexpectedly, these deposits contained no Abeta or serum amyloid P component, a common constituent of amyloid deposits. The thioflavin-S-positive material thus remains to be identified. Pioglitazone decreased glia activation and basal levels of Abeta42- with no change in APP contents - while it increased hydrocephalus, and had no effect on the thioflavin-S deposits. Ibuprofen mimicked the reduction of glia activation caused by pioglitazone and the lack of effect on the thioflavin-S-labeled deposits. CONCLUSIONS: i) TGF-beta1 over-expressing mice may not be an appropriate model of Abeta-elicited CAA; and ii) pioglitazone has paradoxical effects on TGF-beta1-induced pathology suggesting that anti-inflammatory therapy may reduce the damage resulting from active glia, but not from vascular alterations or hydrocephalus. Identification of the thioflavin-S-positive material will facilitate the full appraisal of the clinical implication of the effects of anti-inflammatory drugs, and provide a more thorough understanding of TGF-beta1 actions in brain
PMCID:500868
PMID: 15285804
ISSN: 1742-2094
CID: 61232
Functional domains in presenilin 1: The TYR-288 residue controls gamma-secretas activity and endoproteolysis [Meeting Abstract]
Laudon, H; Karlstom, H; Mathews, PM; Farmery, MR; Gandy, SE; Lundkvist, J; Lendahl, U; Naslund, J
ISI:000223058701851
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47743
Reduction of beta-amyloid load in Alzheimer's disease transgenic mice by competitive blocking of beta-amyloid binding to apolipoprotein E [Meeting Abstract]
Wisniewski, T; Pankiewicz, J; Scholtzova, H; Schmidt, SD; Mathews, PM; Sigurdsson, EM; Sadowski, M
ISI:000223058701935
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47746
Neurodegeneration in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease (AD): Roles of apoptosis and autophagy [Meeting Abstract]
Yang, DS; Kumar, A; Peterson, J; Peterhoff, CM; Duff, K; Nixon, RA; Jeyathevan, R; Martins, RN; Cataldo, AM
ISI:000223058701436
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47738
AD-related cathepsin D overexpression promotes mitochondrial-dependent apoptosis [Meeting Abstract]
Ping, Z; Jiang, Y; Mohan, PS; Mathews, PM; Nixon, RA
ISI:000223058701439
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47739
Binding of cystatin C to amyloid beta inhibits amyloid fibril formation [Meeting Abstract]
Pawlik, M; Sastre, M; Calero, M; Mathews, PM; Kumar, A; Schmidt, SD; Nixon, RA; Levy, E
ISI:000223058700806
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47728
Autophagic vacuoles contain high beta and gamma secretase activities [Meeting Abstract]
Yu, H; Cuervo, AM; Kumar, A; Tjernberg, L; Farmery, MR; Peterhoff, CM; Nixon, RA
ISI:000223058700474
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47719
Calpain mediates calcium-induced activation of the ERK 1,2 MAPK pathway and cytoskeletal phosphorylation in neurons: Relevance to Alzheimer's disease [Meeting Abstract]
Veeranna; Kaji, T; Boland, B; Odrljin, T; Mohan, P; Basavarajappa, BS; Peterhoff, C; Cataldo, AM; Rudnicki, A; Li, BS; Pant, HC; Hungund, BL; Arancio, O; Nixon, RA
ISI:000223058700583
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47723
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy in transgenic mouse models [Meeting Abstract]
Jucker, M; Staufenbiel, M; Mathews, P
ISI:000223058700157
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 47714