| Literature DB >> 35720706 |
Abdullah Al Bashit1, Prakash Nepal2, Theresa Connors3, Derek H Oakley3,4,5,6, Bradley T Hyman3,7, Lin Yang8, Lee Makowski2,9.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder defined by the progressive formation and spread of fibrillar aggregates of Aβ peptide and tau protein. Polymorphic forms of these aggregates may contribute to disease in varying ways since different neuropathologies appear to be associated with different sets of fibrillar structures and follow distinct pathological trajectories that elicit characteristic clinical phenotypes. The molecular mechanisms underlying the spread of these aggregates in disease may include nucleation, replication, and migration all of which could vary with polymorphic form, stage of disease, and region of brain. Given the linkage between mechanisms of progression and distribution of polymorphs, mapping the distribution of fibrillar structures in situ has the potential to discriminate between mechanisms of progression. However, the means of carrying out this mapping are limited. Optical microscopy lacks the resolution to discriminate between polymorphs in situ, and higher resolution tools such as ssNMR and cryoEM require the isolation of fibrils from tissue, destroying relevant spatial information. Here, we demonstrate the use of scanning x-ray microdiffraction (XMD) to map the locations of fibrillar polymorphs of Aβ peptides and tau protein in histological thin sections of human brain tissue. Coordinated examination of serial sections by immunohistochemistry was used to aid in the interpretation of scattering patterns and to put the observations in a broader anatomical context. Scattering from lesions in tissue shown to be rich in Aβ fibrils by immunohistochemistry exhibited scattering patterns with a prototypical 4.7 Å cross-β peak, and overall intensity distribution that compared well with that predicted from high resolution structures. Scattering from lesions in tissue with extensive tau pathology also exhibited a 4.7 Å cross-β peak but with intensity distributions that were distinct from those seen in Aβ-rich regions. In summary, these observations demonstrate that XMD is a rich source of information on the distribution of fibrillar polymorphs in diseased human brain tissue. When used in coordination with neuropathological examination it has the potential to provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying disease.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Aβ; amyloid; neurofibrillary tangles; plaques; tau; x-ray scattering
Year: 2022 PMID: 35720706 PMCID: PMC9198601 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2022.909542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 5.152
FIGURE 1(A) WAXS and SAXS detector images from a pattern taken at the LiX beam line. Relatively sharp reflections at the left and top of the WAXS pattern are from the mica substrate. The strong circle of intensity is at 4.7 Å spacing, the weaker, smaller circle of intensity is at 10 Å spacing. The intensity seen in the SAXS detector is at very small angles and is the most intense in the pattern. (B) The intensities from the SAXS and WAXS detectors are circularly averaged and merged, resulting in scattering patterns that have similar characteristics at most positions in the sample. Regions with a high concentration of fibrillar structures exhibit sharp features at 4.7 and 10 Å spacing. These features can be seen in (C) plots of the difference between scattering from a lesion and scattering from tissue.
FIGURE 2(A) Rendering of four cross-β fibrillar structures—top two are tau structures (from PDB files 6HFR and 5O3L) and bottom two are Aβ structures (from PDB files 2MVX and 5OQV). (B) Scattering patterns predicted from these four structures exhibit sufficiently large differences among them that they should be distinguishable on the basis of XMD data.
FIGURE 3Images of serial sections of amygdala immunostained for tau (left); and Aβ (middle) compared with (right) a mapping of the 4.7 Å intensity observed from an unstained serial section (sequence of sections collected were tau→unstained→Aβ). Selected common features are marked by circles. Lesions seen in the heat map but missing in the stained section are indicated by broken circles. (A–D) WAXS scattering intensity from multiple patterns collected from each of four of the prominent features (features A–D in the x-ray map) are exhibited below. Scale bar 100 μ).
FIGURE 4Comparison of the scattering from lesion A (in Figure 3) with that predicted from the atomic coordinates in PDB file 5oqv. The patterns share prominent features at q = 0.6 Å–1 (10 Å spacing), 1.34 Å–1 (4.7 Å spacing) and weaker features at q ∼ 0.9 Å–1 and 1.2 Å–1. strongly suggesting that the fibrils in lesion A have a structure very similar to that in the in vitro assembled Ab42 fibrils described by PDB file 5oqv.
FIGURE 5(Left) Serial section of entorhinal cortex of a Down Syndrome case with a secondary diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (ADNC) stained for tau (left) compared to a map of the intensity of 4.7 Å scattering from an adjacent unstained section (right). Immunohistochemistry indicated that Aβ was absent from these sections. (A–D) Scattering in the wide-angle region from lesions (A–D) in the corresponding x-ray scattering map (top right) indicated that the scattering was most intense at 4.7 Å, indicating high concentration of cross-β structures. (bottom) Plots of the average and standard deviations of lesions (black) and tissue (red) in the section shown at the top. Greatest difference between lesion and tissue is in the regions around 4.7 Å spacing. Scale bar 100 μ.
FIGURE 6(top left) Image of a section of the entorhinal cortex of a subject with frontotemporal lobar degeneration with tau pathology (FTLD-tau) stained for tau. Comparison with the mapping of x-ray intensities (top right) identified numerous features common to both images. Analysis of the scattering patterns from these features indicated that most exhibited weak enhancement perhaps due to non-fibrillar tau (Figure 5) although most were much weaker (bottom right). Feature exhibited a sharp 4.7 Å feature indicative of the presence of a cross-β structure (bottom left). Given the complete absence of Aβ in this region (by immunostaining), this feature is interpreted as arising from fibrillar tau structures.