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Medin co-aggregates with vascular amyloid-β in Alzheimer’s disease

Authors :
Jessica Wagner
Karoline Degenhardt
Marleen Veit
Nikolaos Louros
Katerina Konstantoulea
Angelos Skodras
Katleen Wild
Ping Liu
Ulrike Obermüller
Vikas Bansal
Anupriya Dalmia
Lisa M. Häsler
Marius Lambert
Matthias De Vleeschouwer
Hannah A. Davies
Jillian Madine
Deborah Kronenberg-Versteeg
Regina Feederle
Domenico Del Turco
K. Peter R. Nilsson
Tammaryn Lashley
Thomas Deller
Marla Gearing
Lary C. Walker
Peter Heutink
Frederic Rousseau
Joost Schymkowitz
Mathias Jucker
Jonas J. Neher
Source :
Nature 612(7938), 123-131 (2022). doi:10.1038/s41586-022-05440-3, Nature 612, 123-131 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Aggregates of medin amyloid (a fragment of the protein MFG-E8, also known as lactadherin) are found in the vasculature of almost all humans over 50 years of age1,2, making it the most common amyloid currently known. We recently reported that medin also aggregates in blood vessels of ageing wild-type mice, causing cerebrovascular dysfunction3. Here we demonstrate in amyloid-β precursor protein (APP) transgenic mice and in patients with Alzheimer’s disease that medin co-localizes with vascular amyloid-β deposits, and that in mice, medin deficiency reduces vascular amyloid-β deposition by half. Moreover, in both the mouse and human brain, MFG-E8 is highly enriched in the vasculature and both MFG-E8 and medin levels increase with the severity of vascular amyloid-β burden. Additionally, analysing data from 566 individuals in the ROSMAP cohort, we find that patients with Alzheimer’s disease have higher MFGE8 expression levels, which are attributable to vascular cells and are associated with increased measures of cognitive decline, independent of plaque and tau pathology. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that medin interacts directly with amyloid-β to promote its aggregation, as medin forms heterologous fibrils with amyloid-β, affects amyloid-β fibril structure, and cross-seeds amyloid-β aggregation both in vitro and in vivo. Thus, medin could be a therapeutic target for prevention of vascular damage and cognitive decline resulting from amyloid-β deposition in the blood vessels of the brain. Aggregates of medin amyloid (a fragment of the protein MFG-E8, also known as lactadherin) are found in the vasculature of almost all humans over 50 years of age1,2, making it the most common amyloid currently known. We recently reported that medin also aggregates in blood vessels of ageing wild-type mice, causing cerebrovascular dysfunction3. Here we demonstrate in amyloid-β precursor protein (APP) transgenic mice and in patients with Alzheimer’s disease that medin co-localizes with vascular amyloid-β deposits, and that in mice, medin deficiency reduces vascular amyloid-β deposition by half. Moreover, in both the mouse and human brain, MFG-E8 is highly enriched in the vasculature and both MFG-E8 and medin levels increase with the severity of vascular amyloid-β burden. Additionally, analysing data from 566 individuals in the ROSMAP cohort, we find that patients with Alzheimer’s disease have higher MFGE8 expression levels, which are attributable to vascular cells and are associated with increased measures of cognitive decline, independent of plaque and tau pathology. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that medin interacts directly with amyloid-β to promote its aggregation, as medin forms heterologous fibrils with amyloid-β, affects amyloid-β fibril structure, and cross-seeds amyloid-β aggregation both in vitro and in vivo. Thus, medin could be a therapeutic target for prevention of vascular damage and cognitive decline resulting from amyloid-β deposition in the blood vessels of the brain. ispartof: Nature vol:612 issue:7938 pages:123-131 ispartof: location:England status: published

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
612
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....86c91db7a3628281af11389c3f665f1a