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Neuron
Published

Soluble Aβ oligomers are rapidly sequestered from brain ISF in vivo and bind GM1 ganglioside on cellular membranes.

Authors

Soyon Hong, Beth L Ostaszewski, Ting Yang, Tiernan T O'Malley, Ming Jin, Katsuhiko Yanagisawa, Shaomin Li, Tim Bartels, Dennis J Selkoe

Abstract

Soluble Aβ oligomers contribute importantly to synaptotoxicity in Alzheimer's disease, but their dynamics in vivo remain unclear. Here, we found that soluble Aβ oligomers were sequestered from brain interstitial fluid onto brain membranes much more rapidly than nontoxic monomers and were recovered in part as bound to GM1 ganglioside on membranes. Aβ oligomers bound strongly to GM1 ganglioside, and blocking the sialic acid residue on GM1 decreased oligomer-mediated LTP impairment in mouse hippocampal slices. In a hAPP transgenic mouse model, substantial levels of GM1-bound Aβ₄₂ were recovered from brain membrane fractions. We also detected GM1-bound Aβ in human CSF, and its levels correlated with Aβ₄₂, suggesting its potential as a biomarker of Aβ-related membrane dysfunction. Together, these findings highlight a mechanism whereby hydrophobic Aβ oligomers become sequestered onto GM1 ganglioside and presumably other lipids on neuronal membranes, where they may induce progressive functional and structural changes.

PMID:24685176 | DOI:S0896-6273(14)00158-5

UK DRI Authors

Soyon Hong

Dr Soyon Hong

Group Leader

Dissecting pathways by which microglia contribute to region-specific synapse dysfunction in neurodegeneration

Dr Soyon Hong
Tim Bartels

Dr Tim Bartels

Group Leader

Untangling protein structure to better understand function and treat neurodegeneration

Dr Tim Bartels