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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Handoko M, Grant M, Kuskowski M, Zahs KR, Wallin A, Blennow K, Ashe KH. Correlation of Specific Amyloid-β Oligomers With Tau in Cerebrospinal Fluid From Cognitively Normal Older Adults. JAMA Neurol. 2013 Mar 11;:1-6. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  David Brody
Submitted 15 March 2013  |  Permalink Posted 15 March 2013

The topic is important, and the results are intriguing.

The issue of Aβ oligomerization is a complex one, and several methodological questions could be raised:

1. The immunoprecipitation with 6E10 and Western blotting with 6E10 may not distinguish between Aβ and soluble APP fragments. It is not clear from the paper whether the detected species are Aβ rather than an APP fragment. Of note, the levels of soluble APP in the CSF are about 100-fold higher than Aβ (see Nitsch et al., 1995, Table 2), so even a minor APP fragment would give a lot of signal in the 6E10-based assay.

2. It will be important to control for the possibility that the immunoprecipitation and Western blotting assay procedures themselves induce artifactual aggregation of Aβ (see Esparza et al., 2013, Fig. 2 L). Monomeric Aβ can aggregate at high local concentrations, such as those that occur after immunoprecipitation.

3. Additional controls of interest regarding the assay include test-retest reproducibility, dilutional linearity, and spike-recovery linearity.

4. A future direction could...  Read more


  Comment by:  Sylvain Lesne
Submitted 15 March 2013  |  Permalink Posted 15 March 2013

The measurements of CSF oligomeric Aβ were done by immunoprecipitation/Western blot using as little as 240 μL per determination (ran as triplicate, then averaged). Using such a low volume suggests it may be possible to integrate similar measurements in longitudinal studies. It is disappointing that CSF levels of Aβ dimers could not be determined due to the experimental design (the acrylamide content in the gel cannot resolve small species). Concentrations of Aβ1-42 and tau/pt181-tau were determined by ELISA, as it is traditionally done for biomarker studies.

Both oligomeric Aβ species (Aβ*56 and Aβ trimers) detected in the CSF correlated with tau/ptau concentrations in aged, unimpaired subjects, while presumably monomeric Aβ1-42 did not. By extrapolation, it could indicate that the elevation of trimer-based Aβ oligomers seen in aging and AD is linked to abnormal tau changes. This interpretation is consistent with the notion that Aβ*56 and Aβ trimers may initiate the disease process during the latent phase of AD (i.e., preclinical AD).

In impaired individuals (including...  Read more


  Comment by:  P. Hemachandra Reddy
Submitted 18 March 2013  |  Permalink Posted 19 March 2013
  I recommend this paper

  Comment by:  Anne Fagan, ARF Advisor
Submitted 19 March 2013  |  Permalink Posted 19 March 2013

Development of valid and quantitative assays for oligomeric Aβ species is considered by many to be the Holy Grail in the AD fluid biomarker field. Such assays are technologically challenging for many reasons. Several groups have reported such assays, but establishing an assay’s validity has been problematic, and none has stood the test of time. Dr. Ashe’s group has been interested in oligomeric Aβ species for several years, reporting in 2006 the presence of the Aβ*56 form in Tg2576 mice and its memory-disrupting ability when injected into rats. In this current paper, they report the presence of Aβ trimers as well as the Aβ*56 species in human CSF samples using a combined immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting procedure. Although the assay appears not to be quantitative (instead, semi-quantitative), the reported percent coefficient of variation among triplicates was good (  Read more

  Primary News: Aβ*56 Found in Human CSF, Correlates With Tau?

Comment by:  Kathleen Zahs
Submitted 3 April 2013  |  Permalink Posted 8 April 2013

It is our hope that the publication of our JAMA Neurology paper and the accompanying Alzforum story will motivate other laboratories to study Aβ*56. We certainly recognize that the existence of this species as an authentic oligomer that occurs in vivo is controversial. Perhaps, though, the following considerations will encourage skeptics and believers alike to take a closer look at Aβ*56.

The existence of specific Aβ oligomers as real entities, rather than artifacts, has been questioned because of the possibility that they are artificially generated through exposure to detergents, such as SDS. Several lines of evidence argue against this possibility.

1. When proteins in undiluted CSF are first separated by size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and then analyzed by Western blot, Aβ*56 and Aβ monomers are seen in separate fractions eluted from the SEC column. If Aβ*56 was artifactually generated from monomers during the process of gel electrophoresis, one would expect to see both of these species in the same fractions from the SEC column.

2. Using the same extraction...  Read more

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