Journal
ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
Volume 119, Issue 2, Pages 221-233Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-009-0583-3
Keywords
Alzheimer; Amyloid-beta; Cerebral amyloid angiopathy; Diagnosis; Imaging; PIB; Senile plaques
Categories
Funding
- Woodruff Foundation
- Emory University Research Committee
- [RR-00165]
- [PO1AG026423]
- [P50AG025688]
- [AG030539]
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Radiolabeled Pittsburgh compound B (PIB) is a benzothiazole imaging agent that usually binds with high affinity, specificity, and stoichiometry to cerebral beta-amyloid (A beta) in patients with Alzheimer's disease. Among a cohort of ten AD subjects examined postmortem, we describe a case of idiopathic, end-stage Alzheimer's disease with heavy A beta deposition yet substantially diminished high-affinity binding of (3)H-PIB to cortical homogenates and unfixed cryosections. Cortical tissue samples were analyzed by immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, ELISA, immunoblotting, MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, in vitro (3)H-PIB binding and (3)H-PIB autoradiography. The PIB-refractory subject met the histopathological criteria for AD. However, cortical tissue from this case contained more vascular beta-amyloidosis, higher levels of insoluble A beta 40 and A beta 42, and a higher ratio of A beta 40:A beta 42 than did tissue from the nine comparison AD cases. Furthermore, cerebral A beta from the PIB-refractory subject displayed an unusual distribution of low- and high-molecular weight A beta oligomers, as well as a distinct pattern of N- and C-terminally truncated A beta peptides in both the soluble and insoluble cortical extracts. Genetically, the patient was apolipoprotein-E3/4 heterozygous, and exhibited no known AD-associated mutations in the genes for the beta-amyloid precursor protein, presenilin1 or presenilin2. Our findings suggest that PIB may differentially recognize polymorphic forms of multimeric A beta in humans with Alzheimer's disease. In addition, while the prevalence of PIB-refractory cases in the general AD population remains to be determined, the paucity of high-affinity binding sites in this AD case cautions that minimal PIB retention in positron-emission tomography scans of demented patients may not always rule out the presence of Alzheimer-type A beta pathology.
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