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In 2006, scientists in Tubingen, led by Mathias Jucker, reported that injection of dilute extracts from Alzheimer's disease brain tissue, or from Abeta-laden mouse brain tissue, into the brains of transgenic mice (genetically modified to produce the human form of Abeta) stimulated Abeta aggregation within the mouse brain (Science 313: 1781-4, 2006).
In the current Science study, Professor Jucker and first author Yvonne Eisele, together with their research team (HIH, University of Tubingen,DZNE) and colleagues Matthias Staufenbiel (Novartis), Mathias Heikenwalder (University of Zurich), and Lary Walker (Emory University Atlanta) report that Abeta deposition can be induced in the transgenic mouse brain by the intraperitoneal administration of mouse brain extract containing misfolded Abeta. This induced Abeta deposition was primarily associated with the vasculature, but was also evident as amyloid plaques between nerve cells. The time needed to induce amyloid deposition in the brain was much longer for peripheral as compared to direct brain administration. In both cases, the induced amyloid deposition also triggered several neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory changes commonly observed in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease and cerebral beta-amyloid angiopathy. "The finding that mechanisms exist allowing for the transport of Abeta aggregates from the periphery to the brain raises the question of whether protein aggregation and propagation, which may also be involved in other neurodegenerative brain diseases, can be induced by agents originating in the periphery", points out Professor Jucker. The present findings provide new clues on pathogenetic mechanisms underlying Alzheimer's disease; further investigation will likely lead to new strategies for prevention and treatment.
Publication:
Peripherally Applied Aβ-Containing Inoculates Induce Cerebral β-Amyloidosis
Authors: Yvonne S. Eisele1, Ulrike Obermuller, Gotz Heilbronner, Frank Baumann, Stephan A. Kaeser1, Hartwig Wolburg, Lary C. Walker, Matthias Staufenbie, Mathias Heikenwalder, Mathias Jucker.
Source: German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases