4.6 Article

Distinct glutaminyl cyclase expression in Edinger-Westphal nucleus, locus coeruleus and nucleus basalis Meynert contributes to pGlu-Aβ pathology in Alzheimer's disease

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
Volume 120, Issue 2, Pages 195-207

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-010-0685-y

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; Locus coeruleus; Edinger-Westphal nucleus; Nucleus basalis Meynert; Glutaminyl cyclase; Pyroglutamate-Abeta

Funding

  1. German Federal Department of Education, Science and Technology, BMBF [3013185]
  2. Pacific Alzheimer Research Foundation
  3. European Commission [223077]
  4. German Research Foundation [GRK 1097]

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Glutaminyl cyclase (QC) was discovered recently as the enzyme catalyzing the pyroglutamate (pGlu or pE) modification of N-terminally truncated Alzheimer's disease (AD) A beta peptides in vivo. This modification confers resistance to proteolysis, rapid aggregation and neurotoxicity and can be prevented by QC inhibitors in vitro and in vivo, as shown in transgenic animal models. However, in mouse brain QC is only expressed by a relatively low proportion of neurons in most neocortical and hippocampal subregions. Here, we demonstrate that QC is highly abundant in subcortical brain nuclei severely affected in AD. In particular, QC is expressed by virtually all urocortin-1-positive, but not by cholinergic neurons of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus, by noradrenergic locus coeruleus and by cholinergic nucleus basalis magnocellularis neurons in mouse brain. In human brain, QC is expressed by both, urocortin-1 and cholinergic Edinger-Westphal neurons and by locus coeruleus and nucleus basalis Meynert neurons. In brains from AD patients, these neuronal populations displayed intraneuronal pE-A beta immunoreactivity and morphological signs of degeneration as well as extracellular pE-A beta deposits. Adjacent AD brain structures lacking QC expression and brains from control subjects were devoid of such aggregates. This is the first demonstration of QC expression and pE-A beta formation in subcortical brain regions affected in AD. Our results may explain the high vulnerability of defined subcortical neuronal populations and their central target areas in AD as a consequence of QC expression and pE-A beta formation.

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