1. Neuroprotective natural antibodies to assemblies of amyloidogenic peptides decrease with normal aging and advancing Alzheimer's disease.
- Author
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Britschgi M, Olin CE, Johns HT, Takeda-Uchimura Y, LeMieux MC, Rufibach K, Rajadas J, Zhang H, Tomooka B, Robinson WH, Clark CM, Fagan AM, Galasko DR, Holtzman DM, Jutel M, Kaye JA, Lemere CA, Leszek J, Li G, Peskind ER, Quinn JF, Yesavage JA, Ghiso JA, and Wyss-Coray T
- Subjects
- Aging drug effects, Alzheimer Disease blood, Alzheimer Disease complications, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Amyloid beta-Peptides toxicity, Animals, Antibodies blood, Antibodies cerebrospinal fluid, Cytoprotection drug effects, Dementia complications, Dementia immunology, Disease Progression, Genes, Dominant, Immunization, Immunoglobulin G blood, Mice, Molecular Weight, Neurons cytology, Neurons drug effects, Peptides chemistry, Primates immunology, Protein Processing, Post-Translational drug effects, Protein Structure, Quaternary, Aging immunology, Alzheimer Disease immunology, Amyloid beta-Peptides chemistry, Amyloid beta-Peptides immunology, Antibodies immunology, Neuroprotective Agents immunology, Peptides immunology
- Abstract
A number of distinct beta-amyloid (Abeta) variants or multimers have been implicated in Alzheimer's disease (AD), and antibodies recognizing such peptides are in clinical trials. Humans have natural Abeta-specific antibodies, but their diversity, abundance, and function in the general population remain largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate with peptide microarrays the presence of natural antibodies against known toxic Abeta and amyloidogenic non-Abeta species in plasma samples and cerebrospinal fluid of AD patients and healthy controls aged 21-89 years. Antibody reactivity was most prominent against oligomeric assemblies of Abeta and pyroglutamate or oxidized residues, and IgGs specific for oligomeric preparations of Abeta1-42 in particular declined with age and advancing AD. Most individuals showed unexpected antibody reactivities against peptides unique to autosomal dominant forms of dementia (mutant Abeta, ABri, ADan) and IgGs isolated from plasma of AD patients or healthy controls protected primary neurons from Abeta toxicity. Aged vervets showed similar patterns of plasma IgG antibodies against amyloid peptides, and after immunization with Abeta the monkeys developed high titers not only against Abeta peptides but also against ABri and ADan peptides. Our findings support the concept of conformation-specific, cross-reactive antibodies that may protect against amyloidogenic toxic peptides. If a therapeutic benefit of Abeta antibodies can be confirmed in AD patients, stimulating the production of such neuroprotective antibodies or passively administering them to the elderly population may provide a preventive measure toward AD.
- Published
- 2009
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