 |
|
Neurology: Alzheimer's Study Maps Alternate Route to Disease
|
|
Cell Biology: Yeast Ramps Up Sugar Production to Survive Cold
|
|
Clinical Research: Harvard Clinical Research Group Gains Reputation for Trial Design, Statistical Analysis
|
|
Women's Health In Kass Lecture, Brundtland Points Way Toward Eliminating Global Health and Gender Disparities
|
|
Regulator of Protein Degradation Emerges as Anticancer Target
Flaws Revealed in Study Assailing Mammograms
Inflammatory Pathway Uncovered with Tie to Early Atherosclerosis
|
|

New Full and Named Professors
Thier Professorship Established for Work in Health Policy at BWH or MGH
Hirsh Nominated for AAMC Humanism Award, Celebration Planned for Award Nominees
Student Research Displayed at HST Forum
HMS Again Takes Top Spot in U.S. News Rankings
Honors and Advances
News Briefs
|
 Coalition Supports Haitian Immigrants
|
 When It Comes to Drugs, Price Is Not the Real Problem
|
Front
Page
|
|
NEUROLOGY
Alzheimer's Study Maps Alternate Route to Disease
Presenilins Linked to Loss-of-function Dementia
In 1906, Alois Alzheimer was the first to correlate dementia with the
presence of amyloid plaques, dense proteinaceous deposits that appear
throughout specific regions of the brain, particularly the hypothalamus
and cortex. Fast forward almost 100 years and scientists are still
striving to piece together sometimes conflicting clues to the pathology
of the disease that now bears his name. One theory suggests that the
presenilin (PS) proteases that cleave beta-amyloid peptides from the
amyloid precursor protein are overactive and release too many peptides
for the brain to manage. The discovery that certain rare forms of the
disease are caused by presenilin mutations supports this
gain-of-function hypothesis, as does the finding that these mutants
preferentially lop off the slightly longer and stickier of the two
amyloid peptides, Abeta42.

Conditionally knocking out presenilin genes in
forebrain neurons leads to progressive neurodegeneration and to
learning and memory deficits. Hippocampal dendrites in two-month-old
double knockouts (cDKO) appear normal (left), but seven months later
dendritic spines are significantly depleted compared to those from
age-matched control animals (right). (Copyright 2004 Cell Press.)
But do presenilin mutations really result in a gain of function? Maybe
not, suggests Jie Shen, HMS assistant professor of neurology at Brigham
and Women's Hospital. Reporting in the April 8 Neuron,
Shen shows that presenilins are needed to prevent neurodegeneration and
that they are essential for learning and memory, two of the brain
functions hardest hit in Alzheimer's patients. "The role we've found
for presenilins in the adult brain is almost exactly what one would
expect of an Alzheimer gene," said Shen.
Her data suggest that familial presenilin mutations that cause
Alzheimer's may primarily result in a loss of function. Bart de
Strooper, professor of molecular medicine at the University of Leuven,
Belgium, agrees. De Strooper was one of the first to propose the
gain-of-function hypothesis in the late '90s and has been commissioned
by Neuron
to write a review on Shen's work. "Shen's data add a new twist to our
thinking about familial Alzheimer's disease," he said. "A year ago it
was more or less accepted that familial Alzheimer's disease mutations
were gain-of-'disease'-function; now it is apparent that they could
also act via a loss of function." Precision Knockouts
Shen spent eight painstaking years, with support from the Alzheimer's
Association and the National Institute of Neurologic Disorders and
Stroke, to arrive at this conclusion, developing mouse models in which
either PS1
or both presenilin genes are inactive. Because presenilins are
essential for development, double knockouts die as embryos. So to
determine what role the presenilins have in adult mice, Shen and
colleagues set about to make conditional knockouts, or cKOs. In these
model animals, the gene of interest can be selectively ablated with
spatial and temporal precision. Shen engineered double cKOs, or cDKO
mice, so that both presenilins would be silenced only in forebrain
neurons, and only postnatally, to avoid any impact on development.
|
"A year ago it was more or less accepted that
familial Alzheimer's disease mutations were gain-of-'disease'-function;
now it is apparent that they could also act via a loss of function." --Bart de Strooper
|
At two months old, the cDKOs appeared similar to control mice, and they
had normal brain morphology. In tests of learning and memory, however,
they were lacking. Their deficits were apparent when postdoctoral
fellows Carlos Saura and Seema Malkani subjected the mice to the now
famous Morris water maze test. This requires that mice, using visual
clues, train themselves to find the safety of a hidden platform in a
circular water tank. After five day's training, normal mice were taking
about 17 seconds to find the platform. The PS conditional knockouts
took considerably longer, almost 60 percent longer in fact, or around
27 seconds, indicating they had a spatial memory deficit. Further
evidence of the memory impairment came from contextual fear
conditioning, in which mice learn to associate an experimental chamber
with a mild foot shock. Again, the cDKOs remembered the association
less well than control mice. As in Alzheimer's disease, these memory
impairments became much more severe as the animals aged. By six months
of age, for example, the mutant mice took more than 50 seconds to find
the platform in the water maze. Dementia Without Plaques
So what was happening to these animals? To address this question, Shen
enlisted the help of Alfredo Kirkwood, an electrophysiologist at Johns
Hopkins University. Kirkwood, together with his postdoc Se-Young Choi
and Dawei Zhang from Shen's lab, examined the mice for deficits in
synaptic function that might alter learning and memory. Both these
higher brain functions require synaptic plasticity, which is
demonstrated by long-term potentiation, or the ability of a neuron to
respond to repetitive stimulation by generating stronger and stronger
electrical signals. Again, neurons from mutant mice were found wanting.
Those from two-month-old mutant animals were about 20 percent weaker at
long-term potentiation than normal neurons, while neurons from
six-month-old animals were more than 35 percent weaker than those from
age-matched controls.

Presenilin mutations were thought to cause Alzheimer's
disease through a gain-of-function mechanism. Now, Jie Shen and
colleagues, including Dawei Zhang (left) and Vassilios Beglopoulos
(right), show that learning and memory deficits in mice can actually be
caused by the loss of these genes. (Photo by Leah Gourley)
To understand what molecular changes could explain the
learning and memory defects, Shen, together with Saura and postdoc
Vassilios Beglopoulos, examined expression of two key players in
long-term potentiation, the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor and alpha
calcium calmodulin-dependent kinase II. They found that both of these
were significantly reduced in two-month-old mutant mice. But there were
also other molecular ramifications of knocking out presenilins.
CREB-binding protein, which together with CREB activates a whole host
of genes, was also significantly repressed, and phosphorylated tau, the
major constituent of the neurofibrillary tangles found in brain tissue
from Alzheimer's patients, was elevated. These effects may underlie the
substantial and progressive neurodegeneration that Shen observed in the
cDKOs. In the neocortex, for example, neurons are decimated by nine
months, while in the hippocampus, synapses and dendritic processes are
extensively ablated (see figure).
Taking the data as a whole, ablating presenilins seems to create
many of the symptoms of Alzheimer's, but without the production of
Abeta. How does this fit with current knowledge? "Gain of function is
still important," said Shen, "because we know that PS
mutants can preferentially produce Abeta42, and that has been shown to
have effects on memory also. But we must also consider familial
Alzheimer's disease in the context of loss of function."
"This is the most interesting point," said de Strooper, "that loss of
PS leads to synaptic problems and neurodegeneration, but with no Abeta
in sight. Shen's work reemphasizes the fact that we have a major
outstanding issue to be resolved, namely, there is more to Alzheimer's
disease than Abeta."
--Tom Fagan
|