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Aβ and Tau Prions Causing Alzheimer's Disease.

Abstract
Studies show that patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) have both Aβ and tau prions, and thus, AD is a double-prion disease. AD patients with the greatest longevity exhibited low levels of both Aβ and tau prions; tau prions were nearly absent in the brains of almost half of the patients who lived beyond 80 years of age. Using cellular bioassays for prions in postmortem samples, we found that both Aβ and tau proteins misfold into prions leading to AD, which is either a sporadic or familial dementing disorder. Although AD is transmissible experimentally, there is no evidence that AD is either communicable or contagious. Since the progression of AD correlates poorly with insoluble Aβ in the central nervous system (CNS), it was difficult to distinguish between inert amyloids and Aβ prions. To measure the progression of AD, we devised rapid bioassays to measure the abundance of isoform-specific Aβ prions in the brains of transgenic (Tg) mice and in postmortem human CNS samples from AD victims and people who died of other neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). We found significant correlations between the longevity of individuals with AD, sex, and genetic background, despite the fact that all postmortem brain tissue had essentially the same confirmed neuropathology.Although brains from all AD patients had measurable levels of Aβ prions at death, the oldest individuals had lower Aβ prion levels than the younger ones. Additionally, the long-lived individuals had low tau prion levels that correlated with the extent of phosphorylated tau (p-tau). Unexpectedly, a longevity-dependent decrease in tau prions was found in spite of increasing amounts of total insoluble tau. When corrected for the abundance of insoluble tau, the tau prion levels decreased exponentially with respect to the age at death with a half-time of approximately one decade, and this correlated with the abundance of phosphorylated tau.Even though our findings with tau prions were not unexpected, they were counterintuitive; thus, tau phosphorylation and tau prion activity decreased exponentially with longevity in patients with AD ranging from ages 37 to 99 years. Our findings demonstrated an inverse correlation between longevity in AD patients and the abundance of neurotoxic tau prions. Moreover, our discovery may have profound implications for the selection of phenotypically distinct patient populations and the development of diagnostics and effective therapeutics for AD.
AuthorsCarlo Condello, Gregory E Merz, Atsushi Aoyagi, William F DeGrado, Stanley B Prusiner
JournalMethods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) (Methods Mol Biol) Vol. 2561 Pg. 293-337 ( 2023) ISSN: 1940-6029 [Electronic] United States
PMID36399277 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural)
Copyright© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
Chemical References
  • Prions
  • Amyloid beta-Peptides
  • tau Proteins
Topics
  • Humans
  • Animals
  • Mice
  • Adult
  • Middle Aged
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Alzheimer Disease (metabolism)
  • Prions
  • Amyloid beta-Peptides (metabolism)
  • tau Proteins (metabolism)
  • Mice, Transgenic

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