4.6 Article

Human amygdala involvement in Alzheimer's disease revealed by stereological and dia-PASEF analysis

Journal

BRAIN PATHOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bpa.13180

Keywords

antioxidant protein 2 (AOP2); BM88 antigen (BM88); calpactin II; calpactin-1 heavy chain (CAL1H); centaurin-alpha-1 (CENTA1); endonexin II (ENX2); nuclear chloride ion channel 27 (NCC27)

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by the accumulation of pathological amyloid-beta (A beta) and Tau proteins and can spread through brain regions via neural connections and glial cells. The amygdaloid complex (AC) is a hub for propagating pathology with early involvement in the disease, and proteomic analysis identified synaptic alterations and volume reduction in AD without neuronal loss. Astrocyte-mediated phagocytic microglial activation and the dual role of microglia are observed, suggesting their potential participation in the spreading of the disease. Proteomic data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD038322.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by the accumulation of pathological amyloid-beta (A beta) and Tau proteins. According to the prion-like hypothesis, both proteins can seed and disseminate through brain regions through neural connections and glial cells. The amygdaloid complex (AC) is involved early in the disease, and its widespread connections with other brain regions indicate that it is a hub for propagating pathology. To characterize changes in the AC as well as the involvement of neuronal and glial cells in AD, a combined stereological and proteomic analysis was performed in non-Alzheimer's disease and AD human samples. The synaptic alterations identified by proteomic data analysis could be related to the volume reduction observed in AD by the Cavalieri probe without neuronal loss. The pathological markers appeared in a gradient pattern with the medial region (cortical nucleus, Co) being more affected than lateral regions, suggesting the relevance of connections in the distribution of the pathology among different brain regions. Generalized astrogliosis was observed in every AC nucleus, likely related to deposits of pathological proteins. Astrocytes might mediate phagocytic microglial activation, whereas microglia might play a dual role since protective and toxic phenotypes have been described. These results highlight the potential participation of the amygdala in the disease spreading from/to olfactory areas, the temporal lobe and beyond. Proteomic data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD038322.

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