Spatial and temporal distribution of intracellular free cholesterol in brains of a Niemann–Pick type C mouse model showing hyperphosphorylated tau protein. Implications for Alzheimer's disease

Journal of Pathology - Tập 200 Số 1 - Trang 95-103 - 2003
Stephanie Treiber‐Held1, Roland Distl1, Volker Meske1, Frank Albert1, Thomas G. Ohm1
1Institut für Anatomie, Charité, Humboldt University, 10098 Berlin, Germany.

Tóm tắt

AbstractNiemann–Pick type C (NPC) disease is a fatal hereditary neurovisceral disorder with diagnostically relevant intracellular accumulation of cholesterol in non‐brain tissue, for example the spleen and fibroblasts. In the brain, many ballooned neurons are seen. Using filipin microfluorodensitometry, significant accumulations of free cholesterol in specified neurons have been described in NPC patients. The present study demonstrates spatial and temporal accumulation of free cholesterol in the brains of homozygous NPC (−npc/−npc) mice, a widely acknowledged mouse model, and in primarily cultured neurons therefrom. Intraneuronal storage of free cholesterol was already prominent at a pre‐clinical stage in various grey matter areas of the murine cerebral cortex. Hippocampal areas showed differential development of the pathological distribution of free cholesterol. The pyramidal cells in the CA3 sector of Ammon's horn were affected much earlier than in CA1. Some of the deeper cerebral nuclei were affected only slightly, even at the final stage. Neurons (E15–E17) cultured in a cholesterol‐free medium also showed massive accumulation of intracellular free cholesterol. In addition, brains from the murine NPC model for Alzheimer's disease (AD)‐like changes in the microtubule‐associated protein tau were tested using the Gallyas silver technique and AT8‐immunolabelling, since both human diseases are accompanied by intraneuronal tangles made up of tau protein aggregations. Although the analysis failed to show classical silver‐stainable tangles of the AD type in the NPC mice, tau protein phosphorylated at epitopes considered to represent early stages of AD was found. This further strengthens the concept that an alteration in cholesterol metabolism may play an important role in AD. The NPC mouse model may thus serve as a tool to analyse the role of cholesterol in initial changes of tau that eventually lead to the formation of tangles in both NPC and AD. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Từ khóa


Tài liệu tham khảo

10.1111/j.1750-3639.1998.tb00143.x

10.1126/science.277.5323.228

10.1126/science.290.5500.2298

10.1023/A:1022575511354

10.1023/A:1005474803278

10.1152/ajpendo.1999.276.2.E336

Distl R, 2000, Tangle‐bearing neurons contain more free cholesterol than adjacent tangle‐free neurons, Soc Neurosci, 26, 1552

10.1007/s004010000314

10.1093/jnen/60.1.49

10.1007/BF00309338

10.1093/brain/118.1.119

10.1007/BF00318566

10.1002/ana.410040504

10.1016/0197-4580(90)90024-T

10.1046/j.1471-4159.1994.62031039.x

10.1126/science.277.5323.232

Higashi Y, 1991, Neuropathology in Brain Research, 85

Börnig H, 1974, Staining of cholesterol with the fluorescent antibiotic ‘filipin’, Acta Histochem, 50, 110

10.3109/10520298809107184

10.1007/BF02312273

10.1111/j.1365-2990.1989.tb01255.x

Gallyas F, 1971, Silver staining of Alzheimer's neurofibrillary changes by means of physical development, Acta Morphol Acad Sci Hung, 19, 1

10.1007/BF00293315

Distl R, Cholesterol storage and tau pathology in Niemann–Pick type C disease brain, J Pathol

10.1016/S0387-7604(01)00209-1

10.1007/BF00687215

10.1074/jbc.275.6.4013

Pentchev PG, 2001, The Metabolic and Molecular Bases of Inherited Disease, 2625

10.1002/(SICI)1097-4547(19970801)49:3<389::AID-JNR14>3.0.CO;2-V

10.1007/BF00227765

10.1023/A:1010942521671

10.1046/j.1471-4159.2000.0751250.x

10.1074/jbc.M009733200