| Literature DB >> 29441010 |
Clare Rusbridge1,2, Francisco J Salguero1, Monique Antoinette David3, Kiterie M E Faller4, Jose T Bras5,6, Rita J Guerreiro5,6, Angela C Richard-Londt7, Duncan Grainger1, Elizabeth Head8, Sebastian G P Brandner7, Brian Summers9, John Hardy5, Mourad Tayebi1,3.
Abstract
Many of the molecular and pathological features associated with human Alzheimer disease (AD) are mirrored in the naturally occurring age-associated neuropathology in the canine species. In aged dogs with declining learned behavior and memory the severity of cognitive dysfunction parallels the progressive build up and location of Aβ in the brain. The main aim of this work was to study the biological behavior of soluble oligomers isolated from an aged dog with cognitive dysfunction through investigating their interaction with a human cell line and synthetic Aβ peptides. We report that soluble oligomers were specifically detected in the dog's blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) via anti-oligomer- and anti-Aβ specific binders. Importantly, our results reveal the potent neurotoxic effects of the dog's CSF on cell viability and the seeding efficiency of the CSF-borne soluble oligomers on the thermodynamic activity and the aggregation kinetics of synthetic human Aβ. The value of further characterizing the naturally occurring Alzheimer-like neuropathology in dogs using genetic and molecular tools is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer; Aβ oligomers; aggregation; canine; canine cognitive dysfunction; neuropathology; neurotoxicity
Year: 2018 PMID: 29441010 PMCID: PMC5797595 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2018.00007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1MR imaging of cortical atrophy and myelin degeneration. (A) Mid-sagittal T2W image of the brain demonstrating atrophy of the intra-thalamic adhesion (*) height 4.76 mm. (B) Transverse T2W at the level of temporal lobes demonstrating cortical atrophy with widening of the subarachnoid space (green arrow) and enlargement of the lateral ventricle (orange arrow). (C) Transverse FLAIR at level of temporal lobes and (D) transverse FLAIR at level of occipital lobes and midbrain demonstrating white matter hyperintensity (blue arrows).
Figure 2Cortico-neuropathological microscopic lesions. (A) Cortical degeneration (vacuolation) and neuronal death observed on routine H&E stained sections of prefrontal cortex and diffuse cerebral periventricular white matter degeneration (vacuolation and pallor); (B) Neuronal degeneration and loss (arrows) confirmed with neuron-specific marker, NeuN. (C) Specific labeling of diffuse Aβ plaques with anti-Aβ specific antibody in the prefrontal cortex. (D) Extensive gliosis in prefrontal cortex revealed by GFAP stain and associated with (E) microglia activation demonstrated with Iba1 staining. (F) Specific labeling of CAA with anti-Aβ specific antibody in the cortical blood vessels in the prefrontal cortex.
Figure 3Immuno-detection of Aβ soluble oligomers. (A) Western blot showing the ability of PRIOC10 anti-oligomer antibody to strongly immunocapture precipitates from the CSF (sub-CSF) but not the serum (sub-serum) derived from the dog. Positive control derived from CSF from Alzheimer's disease patients (patient case number 51486—age 79 years [pos1-CSF] and 60649–65 years [pos2-CSF]) displayed PRIOC10-positivity for soluble oligomers. In contrast, CSF (neg-CSF) and serum (neg-serum) derived from a Rottweiler failed to display PRIOC10 labeling on Western blotting. (B) A customized Sandwich ELISA was used to detect specific Aβ oligomers. Biotinylated anti-Aβ 4G8 (Aβ) (Thakker et al., 2009), PrioAD12 (Aβ1–40) or PrioAD13 (Aβ1–42) (David et al., 2014) were used to immunocapture Aβ species contained in the CSF (sub-CSF) and the serum (sub-serum) precipitates derived from the dog. Purified PRIOC10 anti-oligomer antibody was added to immunodetect specifically Aβ soluble oligomers. The sandwich format of the assay has established the specificity of PRIOC10 antibody for Aβ oligomers. Values shown are the mean Aβ ± SD from 12 observations.
Figure 4CSF but not serum derived from the aged dog leads to neurotoxicity of neuron-like SH-SY5Y cell line. The effect of CSF and serum on the survival of SH-SY5Y cell line was compared with monoAβ1–40, monoAβ1–42, scramAβ25–35, oligoAβ1–40, oligoAβ1–42, fibAβ1–40, fibAβ1–42 as well as CSF (neg-CSF) and serum (neg-serum) derived from a Rottweiler. Values shown are the mean cell survival ± SD from 12 observations.
Figure 5Aggregation kinetics of “seed-free” synthetic monomeric Aβ peptide. Synthetic seed-free Aβ monomers were used to produce (A) PRIOC10-labeled Aβ soluble oligomers and (B) Aβ ThT-labeled fibrils in a kinetic reaction (0–72 h). t0 is the initial time just before starting the kinetic reaction (t0 = seed-free monomers only); t12 represents maximal OD value of PRIOC10-specific Aβ oligomers (t12 = maximal oligomer yield); and t72 represents maximal value of ThT-specific Aβ fibrils (t72 = maximal fibrils yield). (C) seed-free Aβ1–40 (t0) aggregation kinetic was assessed after addition of known quantities of preformed Aβ1–40 amyloid seeds (t12 and t72) and compared with the aggregation kinetic after addition of conversion buffer or scrambled Aβ25–35 (t12 and t72). (D) seed-free Aβ1–40 (t0) aggregation kinetic was assessed after addition of known quantities of preformed Aβ1–42 amyloid seeds (t12 and t72) and compared with the aggregation kinetic after addition of conversion buffer or scrambled Aβ25–35 (t12 and t72). (E) seed-free Aβ1–40 (t0) aggregation kinetic was assessed after addition of known quantities of sub-CSF and sub-serum and compared with the aggregation kinetic after addition of conversion buffer, negative control CSF (neg-CSF) or serum (neg-serum). (F) seed-free Aβ1–42 (t0) aggregation kinetic was assessed after addition of known quantities of sub-CSF and sub-serum and compared with the aggregation kinetic after addition of conversion buffer, negative control CSF (neg-CSF) or serum (neg-serum). Error bars represent the mean level derived from n = 4 wells.