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Abnormal Processing of Multiple Proteins in Alzheimer Disease
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Abnormal Processing of Multiple Proteins in Alzheimer Disease
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Abnormal Processing of Multiple Proteins in Alzheimer Disease
Abnormal Processing of Multiple Proteins in Alzheimer Disease
Journal Article

Abnormal Processing of Multiple Proteins in Alzheimer Disease

1989
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Overview
Cerebrovascular amyloid is the main constituent of the perivascular and neuritic plaques typical of Alzheimer disease, whereas neurofilaments and microtubule-associated tau protein have been considered primary contributors to the formation of the characteristic Alzheimer tangles. Plaques and tangles and their constituents have at times been ascribed a role in pathogenesis of the disease. Normally, neurofilaments become phosphorylated only upon axonal entry. In many neurologic disorders, neurofilament phosphorylation, as detected by any of the available monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to neurofilament phosphorylated epitopes is shifted from an axonal to a cell-body location. An exception is provided by Alzheimer disease, where tangles (which are neuronal cell-body-derived structures) exhibit only one phosphorylated epitope. However, the very presence of neurofilaments in tangles and plaques has been questioned because of a reported cross-reaction of mAbs to phosphorylated neurofilaments with tau protein. On reinvestigating this cross-reactivity we found that four of five mAbs to phosphorylated neurofilaments and four of five mAbs to nonphosphorylated neurofilaments failed to react with tau protein. A fifth mAb (07-5) to phosphorylated neurofilament cross-reacted with partially denatured tau protein at an affinity 1/1700th of that for denatured neurofilaments; nondenatured tau protein in tissue sections did not cross-react. A fifth mAb (02-40) to nonphosphorylated neurofilament also cross-reacted weakly. In Alzheimer disease normal-appearing axons were revealed with all the mAbs to phosphorylated neurofilaments, but tangles were revealed with only one of them (mAb 07-5). mAb to tau protein did not stain or did so indistinctly. Four of five mAbs to nonphosphorylated neurofilaments failed to reveal axons. Upon dephosphorylation of tissue, staining by mAbs to phosphorylated neurofilaments disappeared, and axons were revealed with the mAb to tau protein and all mAbs to the nonphosphorylated neurofilaments. Tangles became stained with tau mAb and one mAb to the nonphosphorylated neurofilaments (mAb 10-1). Quantitative evaluation of immunocytochemical staining intensities and immunoblot cross-reactivity showed that neurofilaments are, indeed, constituents of tangles--apparently exceeding the concentration of tau protein 17-fold. Contribution of both conformation and primary structure to IgG specificity may explain the lack of any cross-reaction of mAbs to neurofilaments with tau protein in intact tissue and the appearance of cross-reaction in immunoblots where conformation specificity may be largely lost. The present data extend earlier findings of abnormal processing of neurofilaments and tau protein in Alzheimer disease and, together with reported abnormal processing of cerebrovascular amyloid β -protein, suggest that inhibition of the processing of multiple proteins is basic to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease, whereas formation of plaques and tangles could be merely the most striking histologic result.