| Literature DB >> 11487049 |
R Le1, L Cruz, B Urbanc, R B Knowles, K Hsiao-Ashe, K Duff, M C Irizarry, H E Stanley, B T Hyman.
Abstract
Neurites that pass through amyloid-beta deposits in Alzheimer disease (AD) undergo 3 changes: they develop phosphorylated tau immunoreactivity; the density of SMI-32-positive dendrites diminishes; and they also develop a marked alteration in their geometric features, changing from being nearly straight to being quite curvy. The extent to which the latter 2 phenomena are related to phosphorylated tau is unknown. We have now examined whether amyloid-beta deposits in APP695Sw transgenic mice, which have only rare phosphorylated tau containing neurites. develop these changes. We found that dendritic density is diminished within the boundaries of amyloid-beta plaques, with the greatest loss (about 80%, p < 0.001) within the boundaries of thioflavine S cores. Remaining dendrites within plaques develop substantial morphological alterations quantitatively similar to those seen in AD. A statistically significant but smaller degree of change in geometry was seen in the immediate vicinity around plaques, suggesting a propagation of cytoskeletal disruption from the center of the plaque outward. We examined the possible physiological consequences of this change in dendritic geometry using a standard cable-theory model. We found a predicted delay of several milliseconds in about one quarter of the dendrites passing through a thioflavine S plaque. These results are consistent with previous observations in AD, and suggest that thioflavine S-positive amyloid-beta deposits have a marked effect on dendritic microarchitecture in the cortex, even in the relative absence of phosphorylated tau alterations.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11487049 DOI: 10.1093/jnen/60.8.753
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuropathol Exp Neurol ISSN: 0022-3069 Impact factor: 3.685