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Studies on the first described Alzheimer's disease amyloid beta mutant, the Dutch variant

Levy, Efrat; Prelli, Frances; Frangione, Blas
Amyloid protein deposited in cerebral vessel walls and diffuse plaques of patients with hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis, Dutch type (HCHWA-D), is similar to the 40-42 residues amyloid beta (Abeta) in vessel walls and senile plaques in brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD), Down's syndrome, and familial and sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). In 1990 we sequenced the amyloid beta-protein precursor (AbetaPP) gene from HCHWA-D patients revealing a single mutation that results in an amino acid substitution, Abeta E22Q. Subsequent identification of additional mutations in the AbetaPP gene in familial AD (FAD) pedigrees revealed that whereas substitutions in the middle of Abeta, residues Abeta21-23, are predominantly vasculotropic, those found amino- or carboxyl-terminal to the Abeta sequence within AbetaPP enhance amyloid parenchymal plaque deposition. Studies of transfected cells showed that substitutions amino- or carboxyl-terminal to Abeta lead to either greater Abeta production or to enhanced secretion of the more hydrophobic thus more fibrillogenic Abeta1-42. Substitutions in the center of Abeta facilitate rapid aggregation and fibrillization, slower clearance across the blood-brain barrier and perivascular drainage to the systemic circulation, possibly higher resistance to proteolysis, and enhanced toxicity towards endothelial and smooth muscle cells. However, most AD patients have no genetic defects in AbetaPP, indicating that other factors may alter Abeta production, conformation, and/or clearance initiating the disease process
PMID: 16914871
ISSN: 1387-2877
CID: 68936

Post-translational modifications in A-beta and non-A-beta amyloidosis [Meeting Abstract]

Ghiso J; Tomidokoro Y; Lashley T; Holton J; Revesz T; Rostagno A; Frangione B
ORIGINAL:0006191
ISSN: 1552-5260
CID: 73967

Matrix metalloproteases and A-beta clearance [Meeting Abstract]

Tomidokoro Y; Lashley T; Revesz T; Greenberg S; Frangione B; Rostagno A; Ghiso J
ORIGINAL:0006193
ISSN: 1552-5260
CID: 73969

Oligomeric assemblies of the A-beta Dutch mutant induces the formation of nucleosomes in primary cerebral endothelial cells [Meeting Abstract]

Cam J; Meyerson JL; Ng D; Frangione B; Ghiso J; Rostango A
ORIGINAL:0006192
ISSN: 1552-5260
CID: 73968

BRI2 modulates amyloid precursor protein processing and inhibits A-beta generation [Meeting Abstract]

Tsachaki M; Fotinopoulou A; Vlavaki M; Poulopoulos A; Rostagno A; Fragione B; Ghiso J; Efthimiopoulos S
ORIGINAL:0006190
ISSN: 1552-5260
CID: 73966

Oligomeric assemblies of the Abeta Dutch mutant induce formation of nucleosomes in primary cerebral endothelial cells [Meeting Abstract]

Cam J; Meyerson JL; Ng D; Frangione B; Ghiso J; Rostagno A
ORIGINAL:0006629
ISSN: 1552-5260
CID: 101631

Oligomeric assemblies of the Abeta Dutch mutant induce the formation of nucleosomes in primary cerebral endothelial cells

Chapter by: Cam J; Meyerson JL; Frangione B; Ghiso J; Rostagno A
in: Alzheimer's disease : new advances by Iqbal K; Winblad B; Avila J [Eds]
Bologna : Medimond International Proceedings, 2006
pp. 397-402
ISBN: 8875873224
CID: 5116

Familial Danish dementia: co-existence of Danish and Alzheimer amyloid subunits (ADan AND A{beta}) in the absence of compact plaques

Tomidokoro, Yasushi; Lashley, Tammaryn; Rostagno, Agueda; Neubert, Thomas A; Bojsen-Moller, Marie; Braendgaard, Hans; Plant, Gordon; Holton, Janice; Frangione, Blas; Revesz, Tamas; Ghiso, Jorge
Familial Danish dementia is an early onset autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder linked to a genetic defect in the BRI2 gene and clinically characterized by dementia and ataxia. Cerebral amyloid and preamyloid deposits of two unrelated molecules (Danish amyloid (ADan) and beta-amyloid (Abeta)), the absence of compact plaques, and neurofibrillary degeneration indistinguishable from that observed in Alzheimer disease (AD) are the main neuropathological features of the disease. Biochemical analysis of extracted amyloid and preamyloid species indicates that as the solubility of the deposits decreases, the heterogeneity and complexity of the extracted peptides exponentially increase. Nonfibrillar deposits were mainly composed of intact ADan-(1-34) and its N-terminally modified (pyroglutamate) counterpart together with Abeta-(1-42) and Abeta-(4-42) in approximately 1:1 mixture. The post-translational modification, glutamate to pyroglutamate, was not present in soluble circulating ADan. In the amyloid fractions, ADan was heavily oligomerized and highly heterogeneous at the N and C terminus, and, when intact, its N terminus was post-translationally modified (pyroglutamate), whereas Abeta was mainly Abeta-(4-42). In all cases, the presence of Abeta-(X-40) was negligible, a surprising finding in view of the prevalence of Abeta40 in vascular deposits observed in sporadic and familial AD, Down syndrome, and normal aging. Whether the presence of the two amyloid subunits is imperative for the disease phenotype or just reflects a conformational mimicry remains to be elucidated; nonetheless, a specific interaction between ADan oligomers and Abeta molecules was demonstrated in vitro by ligand blot analysis using synthetic peptides. The absence of compact plaques in the presence of extensive neuro fibrillar degeneration strongly suggests that compact plaques, fundamental lesions for the diagnosis of AD, are not essential for the mechanism of dementia
PMID: 16091362
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 61252

Diversity of senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease as revealed by a new monoclonal antibody that recognizes an internal sequence of the Abeta peptide

Rabano, Alberto; Jimenez-Huete, Adolfo; Acevedo, Boris; Calero, Miguel; Ghiso, Jorge; Valdes, Israel; Gavilondo, Jorge; Frangione, Blas; Mendez, Enrique
In order to have more specific tools available to approach amyloidogenesis in Alzheimer's disease (AD), we have produced several polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies that recognize specific sequences of the amyloid beta (Abeta) peptide. Here we present results that demonstrate that our monoclonal antibody EM5 recognizes an internal sequence (residues 11-16) of the Abeta peptide. This strategic localization of the epitope allowed us to employ this antibody, together with two previously reported polyclonal antibodies (EM2 and EM3, specific for AbetaX-40 and AbetaX-42, respectively), in an immunohistochemical study aimed at exploring the differential distribution of longer (AbetaX-40/42) and shorter (Abeta17-X) peptides along the various types of amyloid deposits of AD. This antibody panel was used in six AD brains, on sections from associative neocortex, striatum and cerebellar cortex. Single and double immunostaining revealed specific staining of vascular amyloid deposits and neuritic plaques by EM5 antibody, with high co-localization of EM2. Our results suggest that EM5 antibody recognizes pathogenic forms of Abeta deposits (amyloid angiopathy and neuritic plaques) and reveals the existence of a subset of plaques with a profile similar to vascular deposits. Additionally, our results show that diffuse plaques in AD brains may contain Abeta17-X peptides as its principal component. EM5 may be a useful tool in research both on human and transgenic mice tissue that may aid in the study of molecular heterogeneity of plaques in AD
PMID: 16248846
ISSN: 1567-2050
CID: 81092

BRI2 interacts with APP and regulates Abeta production

Fotinopoulou, Angeliki; Tsachaki, Maria; Vlavaki, Maria; Poulopoulos, Alexandros; Rostagno, Agueda; Frangione, Blas; Ghiso, Jorge; Efthimiopoulos, Spiros
Transmembrane proteins BRI2 and APP co-localize with Ass amyloid lesions in sporadic Alzheimer's disease and mutations in both precursor proteins are linked to early-onset familial cases of cerebral amyloidosis associated with dementia and/or cerebral haemorrhage. A specific interaction between BRI2 and APP was unveiled by immunoprecipitation experiments using transfected and non-transfected cells. The use of deletion mutants further revealed that stretches 648-719 of APP751 and 46-106 of BRI2, both inclusive of the full transmembrane domains, are sufficient for the interaction. Removal of most of the APP and BRI2 extracellular domains without affecting the interaction implies that both proteins interact when are expressed on the same cell membrane (cis) rather than on adjacent cells (trans). The presence of BRI2 had a modulatory effect on APP processing, specifically increasing the levels of cellular APP as well as ss-secretase-generated C-terminal fragments while decreasing the levels of a-secretase-generated C-terminal fragments as well as the secretion of total APP and Ass peptides. Determining the precise molecular pathways affected by the specific binding between APP and BRI2 could result in the identification of common therapeutic targets for these sporadic and familial neurodegenerative disorders
PMID: 16027166
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 56303