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1.
Alzheimer s disease (AD) is linked to increased brain deposition of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides in senile plaques (SPs), and recent therapeutic efforts have focused on inhibiting the production or enhancing the clearance of Abeta in brain. However, it has not been possible to measure the burden of SPs or assess the effect of potential therapies on brain Abeta levels in patients. Toward that end, we have developed a novel radioligand, [(125)I]TZDM, which binds Abeta fibrils with high affinity, crosses the blood-brain barrier (BBB), and labels amyloid plaques in vivo. Compared to a styrylbenzene probe, [(125)I]IMSB, [(125)I]TZDM showed a 10-fold greater brain penetration and labeled plaques with higher sensitivity for in vivo imaging. However, this ligand also labels white matter, which contributes to undesirable high background regions of the brain. Interestingly, parallel to their differential binding characteristics onto fibrils composed of 40 (Abeta40)- or 42 (Abeta42)-amino-acid-long forms of Abeta peptides, these radioligands displayed differential labeling of SPs in AD brain sections under our experimental conditions. It was observed that [(125)I]IMSB labeled SPs containing Abeta40, amyloid angiopathy (AA), and neurofibrillary tangles, whereas [(125)I]TZDM detected only SPs and Abeta42-positive AA. Since increased production and deposition of Abeta42 relative to Abeta40 may be crucial for the generation of SPs, [(125)I]TZDM and related derivatives may be more attractive probes for in vivo plaque labeling. Further structural modifications of TZDM to lower the background labeling will be needed to optimize the plaque-labeling property.  相似文献   

2.
Senile plaques composed mainly of beta-amyloid (Abeta) and neurofibrillary tangles principally composed of hyperphosphorylated tau are the major pathological features of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Despite the fact that increased expression of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and presenilin-1 (PS1) transgenes in mice lead to increased Abeta deposition in plaquelike structures in the brain, little is known about the nature and distribution of tau in these mice. Therefore the relationship between Abeta and hyperphosphorylated tau was investigated in mice carrying mutant APP and mutant PS1 transgenes using both light (LM) and electron microscopy (EM) with immunocytochemistry. LM immunocytochemistry revealed cerebral Abeta deposits to be present from 8 weeks of age, whereas hyperphosphorylated tau was not detected until 24 weeks of age, when it appeared as punctate deposits in close association with the Abeta deposits in the cortex and hippocampus. However, dystrophic neurites were not as heavily immunolabeled as they are in AD brain. EM revealed that aggregations of straight filaments (10-12 nm wide) were present in some cellular processes at the periphery of Abeta plaques in 8-month-old APP/PS1 mice. In one such mouse, single filaments and paired filaments showing a helical configuration (50-55 nm half-period, 25 nm max. width) were present in a dark, atrophic hippocampal neuron. Immunogold labeling of APP/PS1 mouse brain revealed hyperphosphorylated tau epitopes in some dystrophic neurites from 24 weeks of age that were similar to those present in AD. These results suggest that hyperphosphorylated tau appears in APP/PS1 mouse brain after the onset of Abeta deposition and although it is associated with Abeta deposits, its distribution is not identical to that in AD.  相似文献   

3.
Seabrook TJ  Jiang L  Maier M  Lemere CA 《Glia》2006,53(7):776-782
Activated microglia and reactive astrocytes invade and surround cerebral beta amyloid (Abeta) plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the role of microglia in plaque development is still unclear. In this study, minocycline was administered for 3 months, prior to and early in Abeta plaque formation in amyloid precursor protein transgenic mice (APP-tg). When minocycline was given to younger mice, there was a small but significant increase in Abeta deposition in the hippocampus, concurrent with improved cognitive performance relative to vehicle treated mice. If APP-tg mice received minocycline after Abeta deposition had begun, microglial activation was suppressed but this did not affect Abeta deposition or improve cognitive performance. In vitro studies demonstrated that minocycline suppressed microglial production of IL-1beta, IL-6, TNF, and NGF. Thus, minocycline has different effects on Abeta plaque deposition and microglia activation depending on the age of administration. Our data suggest that this may be due to the effects of minocycline on microglial function. Therefore, anti-inflammatory therapies to suppress microglial activation or function may reduce cytokine production but enhance Abeta plaque formation early in AD.  相似文献   

4.
The role of microglia recruited from bone marrow (BM) into the CNS during the progression of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is poorly understood. To investigate whether beta-amyloid (Abeta) associated microglia are derived from blood monocytes, we transplanted BM cells from enhanced green fluorescent protein expressing mice into young or old transgenic AD mice and determined the engraftment of BM-derived cells into the brain and their relative distribution near Abeta deposits. When young transgenic mice were transplanted before the onset of AD-like pathology and the brains analyzed 6.5 months later, the number of engrafted cells was significantly higher than in age-matched wild type mice. Moreover, the number of BM-derived cells associated with Abeta was significantly higher than in old transgenic mice transplanted after the establishment of AD-like pathology. Local inflammation caused by intrahippocampal lipopolysaccharide injection significantly increased the engraftment of BM-derived cells in old AD mice and decreased the hippocampal Abeta burden. These results suggest that infiltration of BM-derived monocytic cells into the brain contributes to the development of microglial reaction in AD.  相似文献   

5.
One pathogenic characteristic of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the formation of extracellular senile plaques with accumulated microglia. According to the amyloid hypothesis, the increase or accumulation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides in the brain parenchyma is the primary event that influences AD pathology. Although the role of microglia in AD pathology has not been clarified, their involvement in Abeta clearance has been noted. High mobility group box protein-1 (HMGB1) is an abundant nonhistone chromosomal protein. We reported recently that HMGB1 was associated with senile plaques and the total protein level significantly increased in AD brain. In this study, diffuse HMGB1 immunoreactivity was observed around dying neurons in the kainic acid- and Abeta1-42 (Abeta42)-injected rat hippocampi. HMGB1 also colocalized with Abeta in the Abeta42-injected rats but not in transgenic mice, which show massive Abeta production without neuronal loss in their brains. Furthermore, coinjection of HMGB1 delayed the clearance of Abeta42 and accelerated neurodegeneration in Abeta42-injected rats. These results suggest that HMGB1 released from dying neurons may inhibit microglial Abeta42 clearance and enhance the neurotoxicity of Abeta42. HMGB1 may thus be another target in the investigation of a therapeutic strategy for AD.  相似文献   

6.
Microglial phagocytosis of amyloid-beta (Abeta) deposits is involved in Abeta clearance in vivo. To explore the ability of microglia to phagocytose beta, we cultured human microglia or human monocytic THP-1 cells directly on unfixed frontal cortex sections of an Alzheimer disease (AD) case. We found that when these cells were activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) plus interferon (IFN)-gamma, they developed ameboid morphology and formed clusters around and attaching to amyloid plaques in the tissue. Some cells adhering to these plaques internalized Abeta and some appeared to be degraded. Nevertheless, no significant reduction of the overall Abeta burden was observed. If the cells were not stimulated, they adhered poorly to the sections. We quantified THP-1 cell adhesion to an AD brain section compared with a normal brain section and found it to be significantly increased. If a brain section was rinsed with phosphate buffered saline containing 0.1% Triton X-100, most LPS/IFN-gamma-activated THP-1 cells failed to adhere. However, in co-culture with human astrocytes, the number of adherent THP-1 cells was significantly increased. These results suggest that human microglial cells are capable of adhering to and phagocytosing post mortem AD plaque material but activation may be necessary. Astrocytes may further enhance the process.  相似文献   

7.
Resolution process of cerebroparenchymal amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) deposition has become of increasing interest in the light of recent advance in the Abeta-vaccination therapy for Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the neuropathological features of degraded and disappearing senile plaque remain poorly characterized, especially in the natural course of the disease. To clarify the natural removal processes of Abeta burden in the brain with AD, we devised a triple-step staining method: Bodian for dystrophic neurites, anti-glial fibrillary acidic protein for astrocytes, and anti-Abeta. We thus examined 24 autopsied AD brains. A novel form of senile plaques, termed 'remnant plaques', was identified. Remnant plaques were characterized by mesh-like astroglial fibrils within the entire plaque part, Abeta deposit debris exhibiting weak Abeta immunoreactivity, and only a few slender dystrophic neurites. In remnant plaques, amyloid burden was apparently decreased. The density of remnant plaques increased significantly with disease duration. Dual-labelling immunohistochemistry revealed many Abeta-immunoreactive granules in astrocytes and a modest number in microglia, both of which accumulated in senile plaques. We consider amyloid deposits of diffuse and neuritic plaques to be shredded by astrocytic processes from the marginal zone of plaques, and to gradually disintegrate into smaller compartments. Cerebroparenchymal Abeta deposits undergo degradation. After a long-standing resolution process, diffuse and neuritic plaques may finally proceed to remnant plaques. Astrocytes are actively engaged in the natural Abeta clearance mechanism in advanced stage AD brains, which may provide clues for developing new therapeutic strategies for AD.  相似文献   

8.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by cognitive decline and deposition of beta-amyloid (Abeta) plaques in cortex and hippocampus. A transgenic mouse AD model (Tg2576) that overexpresses a mutant form of human Abeta precursor protein exhibits age-related cognitive deficits, Abeta plaque deposition, and oxidative damage in the brain. We tested the ability of Ginkgo biloba, a flavonoid-rich antioxidant, to antagonize the age-related behavioral impairment and neuropathology exhibited by Tg2576 mice. At 8 months of age, 16 female Tg2576 and 15 female wild-type (wt) littermate mice were given ad lib access to tap water or Ginkgo biloba (70 mg/kg/day in water). After 6 months of treatment, all mice received Morris water maze training (4 trials/day for 10 days) to assess hippocampal dependent spatial learning. All mice received a 60-s probe test of spatial memory retention 24 h after the 40th trial. Untreated Tg2576 mice exhibited a spatial learning impairment, relative to wt mice, while Ginkgo biloba-treated Tg2576 mice exhibited spatial memory retention comparable to wt during the probe test. Spatial learning was not different between Ginkgo biloba-treated and untreated wt mice. There were no group differences in learning to swim to a visible platform. Soluble Abeta and hippocampal Abeta plaque burden did not differ between the Tg2576 groups. Brain levels of protein carbonyls were paradoxically elevated in Ginkgo biloba-treated mice. These data indicate that chronic Ginkgo biloba treatment can block an age-dependent decline in spatial cognition without altering Abeta levels and without suppressing protein oxidation in a transgenic mouse model of AD.  相似文献   

9.
Mutations of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and presenilin-1 (PS1) lead to an increase in beta-amyloid (Abeta) production. Despite the fact that a number of transgenic mice develop cerebral Abeta plaques, few have been subjected to ultrastructural investigation and the sequence of events leading to Abeta plaque formation is unclear. We therefore investigated the doubly transgenic (mutant APP(K670N,M671L)-mutant PS1(M146L)) mouse, which develops Abeta deposits much earlier than singly transgenic littermates. Widespread Abeta plaques with or without a distinct core were found in gray matter. Abeta plaques were also present in white matter. Astrocytosis was greater around gray matter plaques than around white matter plaques. In some plaques, Abeta cores were associated with cell profiles containing prominent endoplasmic reticulum and a homogeneous cytoplasm that appeared to be neuronal. The morphology and location of other profiles indicated them to be microglia or oligodendrocytes. Some Abeta fibrils appeared to lie within these profiles, but they may have been simply surrounded by the cell profile since the profile membrane was not always visible. Dark atrophic neurons, whose morphology suggested that they were apoptotic, were present around gray matter plaques. Cerebrovascular Abeta deposition was also observed in the brains of APP/PS1 transgenic mice. Thus, the amyloid deposition and neuropathology observed in APP/PS1 mouse brain are similar to those in Alzheimer's disease and they appear to develop earlier and become more severe than in the other transgenic models currently available.  相似文献   

10.
The low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) is a multifunctional receptor which is present on senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD). It is suggested to play an important role in the balance between amyloid beta (Abeta) synthesis and clearance mechanisms. One of its ligands, apolipoprotein E (apoE), is also present on senile plaques and has been implicated as a risk factor for AD, potentially affecting the deposition, fibrillogenesis and clearance of Abeta. Using immunohistochemistry we show that LRP was present only on cored, apoE-containing senile plaques, in both PDAPP transgenic mice and human AD brains. We detected strong LRP staining in neurons and in reactive astrocytes, and immunostaining of membrane-bound LRP showed colocalization with fine astrocytic processes surrounding senile plaques. LRP was not present in plaques in young transgenic mice or in plaques of APOE-knockout mice. As LRP ligands associated with Abeta deposits in AD brain may play an important role in inducing levels of LRP in both neurons and astrocytes, our findings support the idea that apoE might be involved in upregulation of LRP (present in fine astrocytic processes) and act as a local scaffolding protein for LRP and Abeta. The upregulation of LRP would allow increased clearance of LRP ligands as well as clearance of Abeta/ApoE complexes.  相似文献   

11.
Diffuse neurofibrillary tangles with calcification (DNTC) is an atypical dementia and is characterized pathologically by diffuse neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) without senile plaques (SPs). In this study, we investigated the distribution of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DR-positive activated microglia in postmortem brain tissue of six patients with DNTC and six patients with Alzheimer disease (AD). HLA-DR-positive activated microglia were observed to associate with SPs in AD. In the DNTC brain, which lacks SPs, HLA-DR-positive microglia were mainly accumulated around weakly tau-positive NFTs, which were also positive for anti-amyloid-P and anti-C3d antibodies. The results of this study suggest that the complement pathway is also activated in the DNTC brain and that immune and inflammatory responses, including microglia activation, may occur around extracellular NFTs in DNTC patients.  相似文献   

12.
Inflammation, in the form of reactive astrocytes and microglia, is thought to play an important role in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis where it correlates with brain atrophy and disease severity. The Abeta protein, which comprises senile plaques, is thought to be responsible for initiating this inflammatory response. Despite having a more aggressive disease process and greater Abeta deposition, few studies have investigated inflammation in early onset AD cases with mutations in the presenilin-1 (PS-1) gene. In fact, many researchers place importance on a variant plaque pathology in PS-1 cases, known as cotton wool plaques, which lack significant inflammatory infiltrate. We investigated the association between inflammation and plaque pathology in PS-1 AD. Classic cored, cotton wool and diffuse Abeta plaques were observed in all cases. PS-1 cases also exhibited a novel plaque pathology with a significantly greater inflammatory response in the form of reactive microglia and astrocytes. These 'inflammatory plaques' consisted of a dense cresyl violet-, silver-, and thioflavin S-positive, but Abeta-, tau-, apolipoprotein E (ApoE)-, non-Abeta component of Alzheimer's disease amyloid (NAC)- and PS-1-negative core. These findings indicate potent stimulator(s) of inflammation that are not typical of the Abeta that accumulates in the pathological hallmarks of sporadic AD. Identification of this substance may be important for the development of future therapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

13.
The epsilon4 allele of apolipoprotein E (ApoE) is an important genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Increasing evidence suggests that this association may be linked to the ability of ApoE to interact with the amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptide and influence its concentration and structure. To determine the effect of ApoE on Abeta and other AD pathology in vivo, we used APPsw transgenic mice and ApoE knockout (-/-) mice to generate APPsw animals that carried two (ApoE +/+), one (ApoE +/-), or no copies (ApoE -/-) of the normal mouse ApoE gene. At 12 months of age, Abeta deposition was present in the cortex and hippocampus and was also prominent within leptomeningeal and cortical blood vessels of all APPsw ApoE +/+ mice. Importantly, although Abeta deposition still occurred in APPsw ApoE -/- mice, no fibrillar Abeta deposits were detected in the brain parenchyma or cerebrovasculature. There was also no neuritic degeneration associated with Abeta deposition in the absence of ApoE. These data demonstrate that ApoE facilitates the formation of both neuritic and cerebrovascular plaques, which are pathological hallmarks of AD and cerebral amyloid angiopathy.  相似文献   

14.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) increases susceptibility to Alzheimer's disease (AD), but it is not known if TBI affects the progression of AD. To address this question, we studied the neuropathological consequences of TBI in transgenic (TG) mice with a mutant human Abeta precursor protein (APP) mini-gene driven by a platelet-derived (PD) growth factor promoter resulting in overexpression of mutant APP (V717F), elevated brain Abeta levels, and AD-like amyloidosis. Since brain Abeta deposits first appear in 6-month-old TG (PDAPP) mice and accumulate with age, 2-year-old PDAPP and wild-type (WT) mice were subjected to controlled cortical impact (CCI) TBI or sham treatment. At 1, 9, and 16 weeks after TBI, neuron loss, gliosis, and atrophy were most prominent near the CCI site in PDAPP and WT mice. However, there also was a remarkable regression in the Abeta amyloid plaque burden in the hippocampus ipsilateral to TBI compared to the contralateral hippocampus of the PDAPP mice by 16 weeks postinjury. Thus, these data suggest that previously accumulated Abeta plaques resulting from progressive amyloidosis in the AD brain also may be reversible.  相似文献   

15.
Factor H, a regulatory protein of the alternative pathway of complement (APC), is present in amyloid-beta (Abeta) plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Abeta plaques also contain significant amounts of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), such as agrin, as well as numerous activated microglia expressing increased levels complement receptor 3 (CR3). Here, we show the colocalization of each of these molecules in the AD brain and the functional capacity for these molecules to bind to one another in vitro. We propose that CR3 receptors expressed by microglia are used for ligand binding to factor H bound to HSPGs and Abeta in plaques in the AD brain.  相似文献   

16.
Apolipoprotein D (apoD) is elevated in Alzheimer's disease (AD) cortex, localizing to cells, blood vessels, and neuropil deposits (plaques). The role of apoD in AD pathology and the extent of its co-distribution with diffuse (amorphous) and compact (dense fibrillar) amyloid-beta (Abeta) plaques are currently unclear. To address this issue, we combined apoD and Abeta immunohistochemistry with ThioS/X-34 staining of the beta-pleated sheet protein conformation in temporal cortex from 36 AD patients and 12 non-demented controls. ApoD-immunoreactive, Abeta-immunoreactive, and ThioS/X-34-stained plaques were detected exclusively in AD tissue. Dual-immunolabeling showed that 63% of Abeta plaques co-localized apoD. All apoD plaques contained Abeta protein and ThioS/X-34 fluorescence. Compared to controls, AD cases showed elevated vascular and intracellular apoD immunostaining which localized primarily to cells clustered within plaques and around large blood vessels. ApoD-immunoreactive cells within plaques morphologically matched MHC-II- and CD-68-immunoreactive microglia, and did not contain the astrocytic marker GFAP, which labeled a subset of apoD-immunoreactive cells surrounding plaques. These data suggest that neuropil deposits of apoD localize only to a subset of Abeta plaques, which contain compact aggregates of fibrillar Abeta. Elevated apoD in AD brain may influence Abeta aggregation, or facilitate phagocytosis and transport of Abeta fibrils from plaques to cerebral vasculature.  相似文献   

17.
This study examined the possibility that in Alzheimer disease (AD) beta-amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) mRNA is delivered to senile plaques (SPs) via dendritic processes. BetaAPP mRNA was detected in SPs by in situ hybridization, using a 1.4-kb cRNA in which both [35S]-UTP and [35S]-CTP were incorporated together. The betaAPP mRNA was compared with that of furin, a proteolytic enzyme putatively involved in betaAPP processing, and its orthologue proprotein convertase PCI served as a control. Human presenile AD cases with mostly immature SPs and AD cases generally with mature SPs were analyzed. To decrypt SPs after hybridization, brain sections were stained with thioflavin S. To establish relationships between the density of dystrophic fibers, the degree of plaque maturation, and the concentration of mRNA in SPs, the plaque maturity markers Abeta(1-42) and Abeta(1-40) peptides were co-localized with neurofilament protein 200 and compared with microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2). The results suggest that immature, Abeta(1-42)- and dystrophic dendrite-containing SPs (but not mature SPs containing Abeta(1-40) and missing dystrophic dendrites) are capable of concentrating specific mRNAs. Dystrophic dendrites may thus serve as a route for the transport of specific mRNAs from the cell bodies to SPs.  相似文献   

18.
Epidemiological and clinical studies suggest that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) that inhibit cyclooxygenase (COX) slow the progression and delay the onset of Alzheimer disease (AD). Two isoforms of cyclooxygenase have been identified. Although much effort has recently been focused on the inducible COX-2 isoform, little is known about COX-1 expression in human brain. We report that COX-1 message and immunoreactivity are localized to human hippocampal CA3 and CA4 neurons, granular neurons in neocortical layer IV, and occasional cortical pyramidal neurons. Quantitative in situ hybridization showed no differences between COX-1 mRNA levels in control and AD CA3 hippocampal neurons. COX-1 immunoreactivity was also present in microglial cells in gray and white matter in all brain regions examined. COX-1 appeared to be expressed in microglial cells regardless of their activation state as determined by HLA-DR immunostaining. However, COX-1 immunopositive microglia were found in association with Abeta plaques, and the density of COX-1 immunopositive microglia in AD fusiform cortex was increased. This pattern suggests an overall increase of COX-1 expression in AD. Currently used NSAIDs inhibit both isoforms of cyclooxygenase. The present study shows that COX-1 is widely expressed in human brain, and raises the possibility that COX-1 may contribute to CNS pathology.  相似文献   

19.
Amyloid plaques, one of the neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease, and their main constituent, the amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta), are triggers of the activation of innate inflammatory mechanisms involving the activation of microglia. To dissect the effects of a non-Abeta-specific microglial activation on the Abeta metabolism, we employed a viral infection-based model. Transgenic mice expressing a mutated form of the human amyloid precursor protein (Tg2576) were used. In preceding experiments, 2-week-old transgenic mice and non-transgenic littermates were infected intracerebrally with the neurotropic Borna disease virus and investigated at 2, 4 and 14 weeks post-infection. The Borna disease virus-inoculated mice showed a persisting, subclinical infection of cortical and limbic brain areas characterized by slight T-cell infiltrates, expression of cytokines and a massive microglial activation in the hippocampus and neocortex. Viral-induced effects reached their peak at 4 weeks post-infection. In 14-month-old Tg2576 mice, characterized by the deposition of diffuse and dense-core amyloid plaques in cortical brain regions, Borna disease virus-induced microglial activation in the vicinity of Abeta deposits was used to investigate the influence of a local inflammatory response on these deposits. At 4 weeks post-infection, histometric analyses employing Abeta immunohistochemistry revealed a decrease of the cortical and hippocampal Abeta-immunopositive area. This overall decrease was accompanied by a decrease of parenchymal thioflavin-S-positive amyloid deposits and an increase of such deposits in the walls of cerebral vessels, which indicates that the elicitation of a non-Abeta-specific microglial activation may contribute to a reduction of Abeta in the brain parenchyma.  相似文献   

20.
Oligomeric and fibrillar beta-amyloid (Abeta) may be toxic in Alzheimer disease (AD), especially after post-translation modification cumulative over time. Racemization of Ser and Asp residues of Abeta in senile plaques (SPs) occurs as an age-dependent process in AD. We previously reported that Abeta1-40 racemized at Ser26 is soluble and susceptible to proteolysis yielding toxic [D-Ser26]Abeta25-35/40 fragments in vitro and in vivo. Here, we focus on the localization of racemized Ser26 residues in AD brains within the limbic system, the earliest site of AD histopathology. We developed antisera (20.1 and 22.7). each with epitopes within [D-Ser26]Abeta25-40. Two forms of truncated [D-Ser26]Abeta were detected either in SPs or within neurons in all 11 AD-affected brains, but not in age-matched controls. [D-Ser26]Abeta25/26-35 (detected by 20.1) was localized to plaque cores, extracellular neurofibrillary "ghost" tangles and vascular amyloid deposits. In contrast, [D-Ser26]Abeta25-40 (detected by 22.7) was observed in most neurons containing intracellular neurofibrillary tangles, but not in SPs. These results suggest [D-Ser26]Abeta]1-40, formed during aging, becomes soluble and diffuses from SPs. It is then proteolyzed to [D-Ser26]Abeta25-35/40, which is toxic and may contribute to the neurodegeneration. This hypothesis may explain the long lag between SP formation and neurofibrillary degeneration in AD brains.  相似文献   

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