Abstract

The fibrillar assembly and deposition of amyloid β (Aβ) protein, a key pathology of Alzheimer disease, can occur in the form of parenchymal amyloid plaques and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). Familial forms of CAA exist in the absence of appreciable parenchymal amyloid pathology. The molecular interplay between parenchymal amyloid plaques and CAA is unclear. Here we investigated how early-onset parenchymal amyloid plaques impact the development of microvascular amyloid in transgenic mice. Tg-5xFAD mice, which produce non-mutated human Aβ and develop early-onset parenchymal amyloid plaques, were bred to Tg-SwDI mice, which produce familial CAA mutant human Aβ and develop cerebral microvascular amyloid. The bigenic mice presented with an elevated accumulation of Aβ and fibrillar amyloid in the brain compared with either single transgenic line. Tg-SwDI/Tg-5xFAD mice were devoid of microvascular amyloid, the prominent pathology of Tg-SwDI mice, but exhibited larger parenchymal amyloid plaques compared with Tg-5xFAD mice. The larger parenchymal amyloid deposits were associated with a higher loss of cortical neurons and elevated activated microglia in the bigenic Tg-SwDI/Tg-5xFAD mice. The periphery of parenchymal amyloid plaques was largely composed of CAA mutant Aβ. Non-mutated Aβ fibril seeds promoted CAA mutant Aβ fibril formation in vitro. Further, intrahippocampal administration of biotin-labeled CAA mutant Aβ peptide accumulated on and adjacent to pre-existing parenchymal amyloid plaques in Tg-5xFAD mice. These findings indicate that early-onset parenchymal amyloid plaques can serve as a scaffold to capture CAA mutant Aβ peptides and prevent their accumulation in cerebral microvessels.

Highlights

  • Fibrillar amyloid proteins deposit in plaques and blood vessels in the brain in Alzheimer disease and related disorders

  • Intrahippocampal injection of biotin-labeled Dutch/Iowa cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) mutant A␤40 strongly deposited on and adjacent to pre-existing parenchymal fibrillar amyloid plaques in Tg-5xFAD mice. These findings show that early-onset parenchymal fibrillar amyloid plaques primarily composed of non-mutated A␤42 can serve as a scaffold to recruit the codeposition of CAA mutant A␤ peptides and prevent the development of microvascular CAA

  • Bigenic Tg-SwDI/Tg-5xFAD Mice Accumulate Elevated Levels of Cerebral A␤ Peptides—In this study, we sought to determine the influence of early-onset parenchymal amyloid plaque formation on the development of cerebral microvascular amyloid accumulation in transgenic mice

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Summary

Background

Fibrillar amyloid proteins deposit in plaques and blood vessels in the brain in Alzheimer disease and related disorders. Intrahippocampal injection of biotin-labeled Dutch/Iowa CAA mutant A␤40 strongly deposited on and adjacent to pre-existing parenchymal fibrillar amyloid plaques in Tg-5xFAD mice Together, these findings show that early-onset parenchymal fibrillar amyloid plaques primarily composed of non-mutated A␤42 can serve as a scaffold to recruit the codeposition of CAA mutant A␤ peptides and prevent the development of microvascular CAA. These findings show that early-onset parenchymal fibrillar amyloid plaques primarily composed of non-mutated A␤42 can serve as a scaffold to recruit the codeposition of CAA mutant A␤ peptides and prevent the development of microvascular CAA This suggests that, in the brain, fibrillar protein deposition in the parenchymal compartment can significantly impact fibrillar protein deposition in the vascular compartment

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