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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Beker S, Kellner V, Kerti L, Stern EA. Interaction between amyloid-β pathology and cortical functional columnar organization. J Neurosci. 2012 Aug 15;32(33):11241-9. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Thomas Beach
Submitted 17 August 2012  |  Permalink Posted 17 August 2012

I think the results raise several questions and have some implications for the disease in humans, but I think it is also exciting that some of the implications and hypotheses arising from the finding can be tested in the transgenic mouse model used.

For human AD, there have been quite a few published studies where investigators have been trying to make sense out of the often intricate patterns formed by amyloid plaques as well as neurofibrillary tangles. The most well known of these, by Powell and colleagues (Pearson et al., 1985), suggested that the distribution of neurofibrillary tangles predominantly to layers III and V of the cerebral neocortex was consistent with a hypothetical "spread" of the disease along cortico-cortical pathways. The authors of the current paper also cite work done by myself with Edith McGeer (Beach and McGeer, 1992), in which we suggested that the laminar pattern of amyloid plaque formation in human AD primary visual cortex might be due to excessive Aβ release as a result of loss of cholinergic, anti-amyloidogenic synaptic input.

One of the...  Read more


  Primary News: Barreling Down Amyloid Plaque Distribution

Comment by:  Gunnar K. Gouras, Michael Lin, Davide Tampellini
Submitted 28 August 2012  |  Permalink Posted 29 August 2012

Beker and colleagues contribute to the important question of what circuitry and cell types are particularly vulnerable in AD transgenic models of β amyloidosis. While we and others examined the barrel cortex in AD transgenic mouse models deprived of sensory input (Tampellini et al., 2010; Bero et al., 2011), the current study made the interesting pathological observation that there is a predilection for amyloid plaques between rather than within the columns of the barrel cortex. This observation points to vulnerability of inhibitory interneurons, which might explain why cortical hyperactivity is pronounced in AD transgenic mice.

Like many investigators, the authors focus on extracellular amyloid plaques as the pathogenic cause of alterations in inhibitory interneurons. However, the APP/PS1 mutant transgenic mice used in this study were examined at a late age, though they develop behavioral impairment prior to plaques. This means that there is dysfunction before amyloid plaques. Remarkably, we noted that GABAergic interneurons in CA1 showed early and prominent intraneuronal...  Read more

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