Cell-type-specific enhancement of amyloid-β deposition in a novel presenilin-1 mutation (P117L)

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Abstract

The presenilin-1 (PS1) gene mutation (Pro117Leu), recently identified in a Polish family is characterized by the earliest reported onset (from 24-31 years) of Alzheimer disease (AD) and a very short duration of disease (4-6 years). The neuropathology of 2 subjects with this PS1 mutation (ages at death: 35 and 37 years) was compared to four Down syndrome (DS) patients (mean age at death: 62 years) and 4 sporadic AD patients (mean age at death: 79 years with a mean duration of disease of 18 years). The Polish familial AD (FAD) patients showed a marked increase in the amyloid burden of 2-6-fold in most areas of the brain. The entorhinal cortex was an exception where the amyloid burden was similar in each category of patient. Some brain regions of the Polish FAD patients showed a massive increase of amyloid, such as the molecular layer of the cerebellum where a 7- and 25-fold increase was noted, compared with DS and sporadic AD patients respectively. The cerebellar vessel amyloid burden was also greatly increased in the FAD patients, reflecting a vascular compartment specific increase of amyloid β deposition. The presence of this PS1 mutation has an even greater effect on both vascular and parenchymal amyloid deposition, than the overexpression of the amyloid β precursor protein present in DS patients, suggesting that PS mutations can be a critical factor determining amyloid deposition.

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Wegiel, J., Wisniewski, H. M., Kuchna, I., Tarnawski, M., Badmajew, E., Popovitch, E., … Wisniewski, T. (1998). Cell-type-specific enhancement of amyloid-β deposition in a novel presenilin-1 mutation (P117L). Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 57(9), 831–838. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005072-199809000-00004

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