Abstract

BackgroundAge-related neurodegenerative diseases share a number of important pathological features, such as accumulation of misfolded proteins as amyloid oligomers and fibrils. Recent evidence suggests that soluble amyloid oligomers and not the insoluble amyloid fibrils may represent the primary pathological species of protein aggregates.ResultsWe have produced several monoclonal antibodies that specifically recognize prefibrillar oligomers and do not recognize amyloid fibrils, monomer or natively folded proteins. Like the polyclonal antisera, the individual monoclonals recognize generic epitopes that do not depend on a specific linear amino acid sequence, but they display distinct preferences for different subsets of prefibrillar oligomers. Immunological analysis of a number of different prefibrillar Aβ oligomer preparations show that structural polymorphisms exist in Aβ prefibrillar oligomers that can be distinguished on the basis of their reactivity with monoclonal antibodies. Western blot analysis demonstrates that the conformers defined by the monoclonal antibodies have distinct size distributions, indicating that oligomer structure varies with size. The different conformational types of Aβ prefibrillar oligomers can serve as they serve as templates for monomer addition, indicating that they seed the conversion of Aβ monomer into more prefibrillar oligomers of the same type.ConclusionsThese results indicate that distinct structural variants or conformers of prefibrillar Aβ oligomers exist that are capable of seeding their own replication. These conformers may be analogous to different strains of prions.

Highlights

  • Age-related neurodegenerative diseases share a number of important pathological features, such as accumulation of misfolded proteins as amyloid oligomers and fibrils

  • In 4 independent fusions using 4 different strains of mice, the only antibodies specific for prefibrillar oligomers were IgMs

  • Mab204 appears to have the broadest generic reactivity because it reacts strongly with all Prefibrillar oligomers (PFOs) tested except IgG light chain

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Summary

Introduction

Age-related neurodegenerative diseases share a number of important pathological features, such as accumulation of misfolded proteins as amyloid oligomers and fibrils. Recent evidence suggests that soluble amyloid oligomers and not the insoluble amyloid fibrils may represent the primary pathological species of protein aggregates. Many age-related degenerative diseases are characterized by the accumulation of amyloid deposits derived from a variety of proteins. Soluble Ab levels correlate better with dementia than insoluble, fibrillar deposits [4,5], suggesting that oligomeric forms of Ab may represent the primary toxic species in AD. Soluble oligomers have been implicated as primary causative agents in many different degenerative diseases where the accumulation of large fibrillar deposits may be either inert or protective (reviewed in [6,7])

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