Department of Biology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22904, USA.
Nature. 2012 May 2;485(7400):651-5. doi: 10.1038/nature11060.
Extracellular plaques of amyloid-β and intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles made from tau are the histopathological signatures of Alzheimer's disease. Plaques comprise amyloid-β fibrils that assemble from monomeric and oligomeric intermediates, and are prognostic indicators of Alzheimer's disease. Despite the importance of plaques to Alzheimer's disease, oligomers are considered to be the principal toxic forms of amyloid-β. Interestingly, many adverse responses to amyloid-β, such as cytotoxicity, microtubule loss, impaired memory and learning, and neuritic degeneration, are greatly amplified by tau expression. Amino-terminally truncated, pyroglutamylated (pE) forms of amyloid-β are strongly associated with Alzheimer's disease, are more toxic than amyloid-β, residues 1-42 (Aβ(1-42)) and Aβ(1-40), and have been proposed as initiators of Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. Here we report a mechanism by which pE-Aβ may trigger Alzheimer's disease. Aβ(3(pE)-42) co-oligomerizes with excess Aβ(1-42) to form metastable low-n oligomers (LNOs) that are structurally distinct and far more cytotoxic to cultured neurons than comparable LNOs made from Aβ(1-42) alone. Tau is required for cytotoxicity, and LNOs comprising 5% Aβ(3(pE)-42) plus 95% Aβ(1-42) (5% pE-Aβ) seed new cytotoxic LNOs through multiple serial dilutions into Aβ(1-42) monomers in the absence of additional Aβ(3(pE)-42). LNOs isolated from human Alzheimer's disease brain contained Aβ(3(pE)-42), and enhanced Aβ(3(pE)-42) formation in mice triggered neuron loss and gliosis at 3 months, but not in a tau-null background. We conclude that Aβ(3(pE)-42) confers tau-dependent neuronal death and causes template-induced misfolding of Aβ(1-42) into structurally distinct LNOs that propagate by a prion-like mechanism. Our results raise the possibility that Aβ(3(pE)-42) acts similarly at a primary step in Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis.
细胞外淀粉样蛋白-β斑块和由 tau 组成的神经元内神经原纤维缠结是阿尔茨海默病的组织病理学特征。斑块由淀粉样蛋白-β原纤维组成,这些原纤维由单体和寡聚体中间体组装而成,是阿尔茨海默病的预后指标。尽管斑块对阿尔茨海默病很重要,但寡聚体被认为是淀粉样蛋白-β的主要毒性形式。有趣的是,许多对淀粉样蛋白-β的不良反应,如细胞毒性、微管丢失、记忆和学习受损以及神经突变性,在 tau 表达的情况下会大大放大。氨基末端截断、焦谷氨酸化 (pE) 形式的淀粉样蛋白-β与阿尔茨海默病强烈相关,比淀粉样蛋白-β、残基 1-42(Aβ(1-42))和 Aβ(1-40)更具毒性,并被提议作为阿尔茨海默病发病机制的启动子。在这里,我们报告了 pE-Aβ 可能引发阿尔茨海默病的机制。Aβ(3(pE)-42)与过量的 Aβ(1-42)共寡聚化形成亚稳定的低-n 寡聚物 (LNO),与单独由 Aβ(1-42)形成的可比 LNO 相比,其结构明显不同,对培养神经元的细胞毒性更强。tau 是细胞毒性所必需的,并且由 5% Aβ(3(pE)-42)加 95% Aβ(1-42)(5% pE-Aβ)组成的 LNO 通过多次连续稀释到 Aβ(1-42)单体中,在没有额外的 Aβ(3(pE)-42)的情况下,为新的细胞毒性 LNO 播种。从人类阿尔茨海默病大脑中分离出的 LNO 含有 Aβ(3(pE)-42),并在小鼠中触发 Aβ(3(pE)-42)的形成增强,导致 3 个月时神经元丢失和神经胶质增生,但在 tau 缺失背景下则不会。我们得出结论,Aβ(3(pE)-42)赋予 tau 依赖性神经元死亡,并导致模板诱导的 Aβ(1-42)错误折叠成具有不同结构的 LNO,这些 LNO 通过类朊病毒机制传播。我们的结果提出了一种可能性,即 Aβ(3(pE)-42)在阿尔茨海默病发病机制的初始步骤中具有类似的作用。