| Literature DB >> 27645291 |
Nadav J Hart1, Yosef Koronyo1, Keith L Black1, Maya Koronyo-Hamaoui2,3.
Abstract
Although historically perceived as a disorder confined to the brain, our understanding of Alzheimer's disease (AD) has expanded to include extra-cerebral manifestation, with mounting evidence of abnormalities in the eye. Among ocular tissues, the retina, a developmental outgrowth of the brain, is marked by an array of pathologies in patients suffering from AD, including nerve fiber layer thinning, degeneration of retinal ganglion cells, and changes to vascular parameters. While the hallmark pathological signs of AD, amyloid β-protein (Aβ) plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) comprising hyperphosphorylated tau (pTau) protein, have long been described in the brain, identification of these characteristic biomarkers in the retina has only recently been reported. In particular, Aβ deposits were discovered in post-mortem retinas of advanced and early stage cases of AD, in stark contrast to non-AD controls. Subsequent studies have reported elevated Aβ42/40 peptides, morphologically diverse Aβ plaques, and pTau in the retina. In line with the above findings, animal model studies have reported retinal Aβ deposits and tauopathy, often correlated with local inflammation, retinal ganglion cell degeneration, and functional deficits. This review highlights the converging evidence that AD manifests in the eye, especially in the retina, which can be imaged directly and non-invasively. Visual dysfunction in AD patients, traditionally attributed to well-documented cerebral pathology, can now be reexamined as a direct outcome of retinal abnormalities. As we continue to study the disease in the brain, the emerging field of ocular AD warrants further investigation of how the retina may faithfully reflect the neurological disease. Indeed, detection of retinal AD pathology, particularly the early presenting amyloid biomarkers, using advanced high-resolution imaging techniques may allow large-scale screening and monitoring of at-risk populations.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Amyloid-beta; Neurodegenerative disease; Ocular abnormalities; Retinal biomarkers; Tauopathy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27645291 PMCID: PMC5106496 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-016-1613-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Abnormalities observed in ocular tissues of AD patients
| Tissue | Pathology | Findings | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNS | ||||
| Retina | Amyloid | Elevated AβPP expression | [ | |
| Increased Aβ40 and Aβ42 peptide levels | [ | |||
| Classical and diffuse extracellular Aβ plaques, plaque-like structures, and intracellular Aβ deposits, particularly in the superior quadrant and innermost layers | [ | |||
| Aβ deposits inside and around degenerating melanopsin (m)RGCsa | [ | |||
| Tau | pTau positive in GCL, IPL, INL, ONL, and OPL | [ | ||
| Neuronal degeneration | NFL thinning and macular volume loss in all quadrants; Mostly in superior and inferior quadrants; Diffuse dropout; NFL thickness correlated with MMSEb score, NFL abnormalities | [ | ||
| GCL degeneration from mild to severe; RGC swelling; Loss of mRGCs and dendritic arborization | [ | |||
| Inflammation | Extensive cell processes suggesting gliosis from ILMc adjacent to GCL | [ | ||
| Vascular | Perivascular Aβ deposition | [ | ||
| Reduction of venous blood flow, column diameter, speed, arteriolar and venular fractal dimensions, branching complexity and geometric optimality; Changes to arteriolar and venular tortuosity; Increased width variation; Blood flow correlated with NFL thickness | [ | |||
| Elevated oxygen saturation | [ | |||
| Other |
| [ | ||
| Optic nerve | Structural | Large caliber fiber loss; Superior and nasal quadrant axonal loss, overall reduction; | [ | |
| Non-CNS | ||||
| Lens | Amyloid | Elevated AβPP expression | [ | |
| Other | Cytosolic electron-dense Aβ nanodeposits in supranuclear, cortical regions and in anterior epithelial subregion in DSe lens | [ | ||
| Supranuclear cataracts; Opacityf; PS1g expressed in DS lens | [ | |||
| Cornea | Other | PS1 expressed in the DS cornea | [ | |
| Aq. humor | Amyloid | Increased Aβ40 levels | [ | |
| Choroid | Structural | Thickness reduction | [ | |
aRetinal ganglion cell
bMini-Mental State Examination
cInner limiting membrane
dFluorescence lifetime imaging ophthalmoscopy
eDown’s syndrome
fOpacity difference not statistically significant
gPresenilin-1 protein
Fig. 1Flat-mount retinas from AD patients exhibit the accumulation of Aβ deposits. a–c Representative microscopic images from a definite AD patient (74 years) and a matched control individual (CTRL; 71 years) stained with anti-Aβ42 C-terminal-specific antibody (12F4) and visualized with peroxidase-based labeling (DAB). Blood vessel structures seen as lighter lanes. c Classical mature Aβ plaques observed along a retinal blood vessel. d, e Fluoresence labeling of Aβ42-containing deposits detected in retina of AD patient (yellow), using curcumin (green), 12F4 antibody (red), and DAPI nuclear staining (blue). Sudan Black B (SBB) is used to quench non-specific autofluorescent signal. f Compact extracellular Aβ plaque and cytosolic Aβ40 accumulations observed following curcumin and anti-Aβ40 C-terminal-specific antibody (11A5-B10) staining in post-mortem retinas of AD patients. Arrows indicate various types of Aβ plaques
Images a-c adopted from La Morgia et al., Annals of Neurology, vol. 79, no. 1, pp. 90–109, 2015
Fig. 2Manifestations of AD in the Human Retina. a Visual pathway. b Eye-sagittal plane. c Retinal flat-mount shows the geometric distribution of pathology by quadrant with more consistent findings of NFL thinning indicated by darker shading. d Cross section of retina and adjacent ocular tissues shows the distribution of pathology by tissue layer. Aβ amyloid beta-protein, pTau phosphorylated tau, NFL nerve fiber layer, GCL ganglion cell layer, IPL inner plexiform layer, INL inner nuclear layer, OPL outer plexiform layer, ONL outer nuclear layer, ILM inner limiting membrane, OLM outer limiting membrane, IS/OS inner and outer segments of photoreceptor layer, RPE retinal pigment epithelium, P. Pole posterior pole
AD-specific ocular biomarkers in animal models
| AD pathology | Species | Model | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amyloid-related | ||||
| AβPP expression | Drosophila | AβPPa/dBACEb/dPsnc | Expression in fly eye; Over-expression in all murine retinal layers, optic nerve, cornea, lens | [ |
| Mouse | Tg2576d, APP/PS1e | |||
|
| Sporadic AD (aged) | |||
| Aβ peptides | Drosophila | pGMR-Aβ42g, dBACE-AβPPLh | Increased levels in retinal extracts from fly; NFL, GCL, IPL, INL, OPL, OSi, RPE (extra- and intracellular), choroid, cornea, lens, vitreous humor, including oligomeric Aβ species and Aβ engulfed by astrocytes; In | [ |
| Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1, 3xTgj, 5xFADk | |||
|
| Sporadic AD (aged) | |||
| Aβ deposits | Drosophila | AβPP, dBACE-AβPPL, pGMR-Aβ42 | Retinal extracts from fly; Deposits and/or plaques in most retinal layers (strongest in GCL and central retinal region), optic nerve, sclera; Endogenous dAβl deposits | [ |
| Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1, 3xTg, 5xFAD | |||
|
| Sporadic AD (aged) | |||
| Rat | TgF344-ADm | |||
| Vascular Aβ | Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1 | Vascular-associated deposition in GCL, IPL, INL, OPL, and choroid in rodents | [ |
| Rat | TgF344-AD | |||
| Tau-related | ||||
| pTau | Drosophila | hTaun | Differential cell type-specific pTau variants in fly eye; Increased in most retinal layers, strongest in GCL, none in NFL, RPE; NFL, GCL, and AT8o reactivity in | [ |
| Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1 | |||
|
| Sporadic AD (aged) | |||
| NFTp | Mouse | APP/PS1 | Immunoreactivity in murine retina, particularly in GCL and RPE | [ |
aDrosophila expressing amyloid β-protein precursor
bDrosophila expressing β-secretase 1
cModel expressing drosophila presenilin-1 protein
dMouse overexpressing APP isoform 695 bearing Swedish double mutations K670M/N671L
eMouse overexpressing APPSWE/PS1ΔE9 or APPSWE/PS1M146L
f Octodon degus, WT rodent native to Chile showing symptoms of sporadic AD
gGlass multiple reporter drosophila model expressing Aβ42
hDrosophila expressing AβPP-like protein
iOuter segment of photoreceptors
jMouse overexpressing APPSWE/PS1/TAUP301L
kMouse overexpressing APPSWE/FL/LON/PS1M146L/L286V
lDrosophila amyloid β-protein
mAPPSWE/PS1ΔE9 rat model
nDrosophila expressing human Tau protein
oAntibody binding pTau phosphorylated at Ser202 and Thr205
pNeurofibrillary tangle
Non-specific ocular abnormalities in animal models of AD
| Abnormality | Species | Model | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retinal degeneration | Drosophila | AβPPa/dBACEb/dPsnc, pGMR-Aβ42d, dBACE/AβPPLe, hAβ42tgf | Photoreceptor, optic nerve axonal degeneration, and overall abnormality in the fly eye; Thinning, amacrine cell apoptosis and other signs of degeneration in all layers, particularly NFL, GCL, IPL, and RPE | [ |
| Mouse | Tg2576g, APP/PS1 h, 5xFADi, hAβPPtg/tgj | |||
| Inflammation | Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1, 3xTgk, 5xFAD, ApoE4 l | Increased microgliosis, MCP-1m upregulation, infiltration by lymphocytes and monocytes, and abnormally shaped GFAP-astrocytesn engulfing Aβ, other signs of inflammation in most retinal layers, particularly in and near GCL, choroid | [ |
| Rat | Tg344-ADo | |||
| Structural | Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1, 5xFAD, ApoE4 | Retina. Synaptic impairment and density decrease of axons and synapses; tight junction attenuation; increased vascular branching and budding; RPE-adjacent Drusen-like deposits along Bruch’s membrane; RGC dendritic complexity, field area, length decreases; cell loss and sparse distribution, GCL displaced cholinergic amacrine cell degeneration, ILM thickening | [ |
|
| Sporadic AD (aged) | Retina. Post-synaptic dysfunction | [ | |
| Rat | TgF344-AD | Choroid. Thickness reduction and vascular changes | [ | |
| Drosophila | hAβ42tg | Lens. Fission resulting in glazed-eye phenotype and reduced compound eye; swelling, organelle disorganization, opacity | [ | |
| Mouse | Tg2576, hAβPPtg/tg | |||
| Other | Mouse | Tg2576, APP/PS1, ApoE4 | Retina. Double nuclei and hypertrophy in RPE; increased ATPq release; Mitochondrial swelling, crista fragmentation and reduced complexity | [ |
| Rat | TgF344-AD | |||
| Mouse | ApoE4 | Choroid. Increased neovascularization post-LDIr, decreased VEGFs, damage to neonatal vascular branching | [ |
aDrosophila expressing amyloid β-protein precursor
bDrosophila expressing β-secretase 1
cModel expressing drosophila presenilin-1 protein
dGlass multiple reporter drosophila model expressing Aβ42
eDrosophila expressing AβPP-like protein
fDrosophila model expressing human Aβ42
gMouse overexpressing APP isoform 695 bearing Swedish double mutations K670 M/N671L
hMouse overexpressing APPSWE/PS1ΔE9 or APPSWE/PS1M146L
iMouse overexpressing APPSWE/FL/LON/PS1M146L/L286V
jDrosophila model expressing human AβPP
kMouse overexpressing APPSWE/PS1/TAUP301L
lApoliprotein E mouse model
mMonocyte chemoattractant protein-1
nAstrocytes positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein
oAPPSWE/PS1ΔE9 rat model
p Octodon degus, WT rodent native to Chile showing symptoms of sporadic AD
qAdenosine triphosphate, in APPSWE/PS1ΔE9 model overexpressing ATP
rLaser-driven injury
sVascular endothelial growth factor