Literature DB >> 7606469

Accumulation of amyloid precursor protein-like immunoreactivity in rat brain in response to thiamine deficiency.

N Y Calingasan1, S E Gandy, H Baker, K F Sheu, K S Kim, H M Wisniewski, G E Gibson.   

Abstract

Thiamine deficiency (TD) is a classical model of impaired cerebral oxidation. As in Alzheimer's disease (AD), TD is characterized by selective neuronal loss, decreased activities of thiamine pyrophosphate-dependent enzymes, cholinergic deficits and memory loss. Amyloid beta-protein (A beta), a approximately 4 kDa fragment of the beta-amyloid precursor protein (APP), accumulates in the brains of patients with AD or Down's syndrome. In the current study, we examined APP and A beta immunoreactivity in the brains of thiamine-deficient rats. Animals received thiamine-deficient diet ad libitum and daily injections of the thiamine antagonist, pyrithiamine. Immunocytochemical staining and immunoblotting utilized a rabbit polyclonal antiserum against human APP645-694 (numbering according to APP695 isoform). Three, 6 and 9 days of TD did not appear to damage any brain region nor change APP-like immunoreactivity. However, 13 days of TD led to pathological lesions mainly in the thalamus, mammillary body, inferior colliculus and some periventricular areas. While immunocytochemistry and thioflavine S histochemistry failed to show fibrillar beta-amyloid, APP-like immunoreactivity accumulated in aggregates of swollen, abnormal neurites and perikarya along the periphery of the infarct-like lesion in the thalamus and medial geniculate nucleus. Immunoblotting of the thalamic region around the lesion revealed increased APP-like holoprotein immunoreactivity. APP-like immunoreactive neurites were scattered in the mammillary body and medial vestibular nuclei where the lesion did not resemble infarcts. In the inferior colliculus, increased perikaryal APP-like immunostaining occurred in neurons surrounding necrotic areas. Regions without apparent pathological lesions showed no alteration in APP-like immunoreactivity. Thus, the oxidative insult associated with cell loss, hemorrhage and infarct-like lesions during TD leads to altered APP metabolism. This is the first report to show a relationship between changes in APP expression, oxidative metabolism and selective cell damage caused by nutritional/cofactor deficiency. This model appears useful in defining the role of APP in the reponse to central nervous system injury, and may also be relevant to the pathophysiology of Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome and AD.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7606469     DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(95)00136-e

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  9 in total

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5.  Novel neuritic clusters with accumulations of amyloid precursor protein and amyloid precursor-like protein 2 immunoreactivity in brain regions damaged by thiamine deficiency.

Authors:  N Y Calingasan; S E Gandy; H Baker; K F Sheu; J D Smith; B T Lamb; J D Gearhart; J D Buxbaum; C Harper; D J Selkoe; D L Price; S S Sisodia; G E Gibson
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Authors:  N Y Calingasan; L C Park; L L Calo; R R Trifiletti; S E Gandy; G E Gibson
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Review 8.  B Vitamins and Fatty Acids: What Do They Share with Small Vessel Disease-Related Dementia?

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Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-11-18       Impact factor: 5.923

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  9 in total

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