Neurobiology of Disease (Mar 2010)

Intraneuronal amyloid β accumulation and oxidative damage to nucleic acids in Alzheimer disease

  • Akihiko Nunomura,
  • Toshio Tamaoki,
  • Koich Tanaka,
  • Nobutaka Motohashi,
  • Masao Nakamura,
  • Takaaki Hayashi,
  • Haruyasu Yamaguchi,
  • Shun Shimohama,
  • Hyoung-gon Lee,
  • Xiongwei Zhu,
  • Mark A. Smith,
  • George Perry

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 3
pp. 731 – 737

Abstract

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In an analysis of amyloid pathology in Alzheimer disease, we used an in situ approach to identify amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation and oxidative damage to nucleic acids in postmortem brain tissue of the hippocampal formation from subjects with Alzheimer disease. When carboxyl-terminal-specific antibodies directed against Aβ40 and Aβ42 were used for immunocytochemical analyses, Aβ42 was especially apparent within the neuronal cytoplasm, at sites not detected by the antibody specific to Aβ-oligomer. In comparison to the Aβ42-positive neurons, neurons bearing oxidative damage to nucleic acids were more widely distributed in the hippocampus. Comparative density measurements of the immunoreactivity revealed that levels of intraneuronal Aβ42 were inversely correlated with levels of intraneuronal 8-hydroxyguanosine, an oxidized nucleoside (r=− 0.61, p<0.02). Together with recent evidence that the Aβ peptide can act as an antioxidant, these results suggest that intraneuronal accumulation of non-oligomeric Aβ may be a compensatory response in neurons to oxidative stress in Alzheimer disease.

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