AMY plaques in familial AD
Comparison with sporadic Alzheimer’s disease
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Abstract
Objective: To assess AMY expression in familial AD (FAD).
Background: The discovery of nonβ-amyloid (Aβ), plaque-like deposits composed of a 100-kd protein (AMY) in sporadic AD (SAD) brains prompted us to determine whether these plaques (AMY plaques) also occur in AD due to mutations of the presenilin-1 (PS-1), presenilin-2 (PS-2), or the amyloid precursor protein (APP) genes.
Methods: We used immunohistochemistry and confocal laser scanning microscopy to probe the brains of 22 patients with FAD (13 with PS-1, 5 with PS-2, and 4 with APP mutations) and 14 patients with SAD.
Results: AMY plaques were present in all SAD and FAD brains, including an FAD/PS-1 brain from an individual with preclinical disease. The morphology of AMY plaques in SAD and FAD brains was indistinguishable, but they differed from Aβ deposits because AMY plaques lacked an immunoreactive core. AMY plaques sometimes colocalized with Aβx-42 deposits, but they did not colocalize with Aβx-40 plaque cores in either SAD or FAD brains. The percent of cortical area occupied by AMY was greater in FAD than in SAD brains (mean percent area = 9.8% and 5.9%, t = 2.487, p = 0.018). In particular, APP and PS-1 cases had more AMY deposition than PS-2 or SAD cases (12.9%, 10.5%, 6.2% in APP, PS-1, and PS-2 AD).
Conclusions: AMY plaques are consistently present in familial AD due to presenilin-1 (PS-1), PS-2, and amyloid precursor protein mutations, and they can begin to accumulate before the emergence of dementia.
- Received February 14, 1999.
- Accepted July 29, 1999.
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