Intracellular Accumulation of Amyloid- (A ) Protein Plays a Major Role in A -Induced Alterations of Glutamatergic Synaptic Transmission and Plasticity
Male
0301 basic medicine
intraneuronal accumulation
Amyloid beta-Peptides
Neuronal Plasticity
Microinjections
beta-amyloid; Alzheimer's disease; synaptic plasticity
Long-Term Potentiation
Primary Cell Culture
Intracellular Space
Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials
Glutamic Acid
Hippocampus
Synaptic Transmission
Peptide Fragments
autaptic hippocampal neurons
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
whole-cell LTP
synaptic transmission
Animals
6E10
amyloid-β protein
DOI:
10.1523/jneurosci.1201-14.2014
Publication Date:
2014-09-17T17:39:00Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Intracellular accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) protein has been proposed as an early event in AD pathogenesis. In patients with mild cognitive impairment, intraneuronal Aβ immunoreactivity was found especially in brain regions critically involved in the cognitive deficits of AD. Although a large body of evidence demonstrates that Aβ42 accumulates intraneuronally ((in)Aβ), the action and the role of Aβ42 buildup on synaptic function have been poorly investigated. Here, we demonstrate that basal synaptic transmission and LTP were markedly depressed following Aβ42 injection into the neuron through the patch pipette. Control experiments performed with the reverse peptide (Aβ42-1) allowed us to exclude that the effects of (in)Aβ depended on changes in oncotic pressure. To further investigate (in)Aβ synaptotoxicity we used an Aβ variant harboring oxidized methionine in position 35 that does not cross the neuronal plasma membrane and is not uploaded from the extracellular space. This Aβ42 variant had no effects on synaptic transmission and plasticity when applied extracellularly, but induced synaptic depression and LTP inhibition after patch-pipette dialysis. Finally, the injection of an antibody raised against human Aβ42 (6E10) in CA1 pyramidal neurons of mouse hippocampal brain slices and autaptic microcultures did not, per se, significantly affect LTP and basal synaptic transmission, but it protected against the toxic effects of extracellular Aβ42. Collectively, these findings suggest that Aβ42-induced impairment of glutamatergic synaptic function depends on its internalization and intracellular accumulation thus paving the way to a systemic proteomic analysis of intracellular targets/partners of Aβ42.
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