4.5 Article

The role of microglial cells and astrocytes in fibrillar plaque evolution in transgenic APP(SW) mice

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF AGING
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 49-61

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0197-4580(00)00181-0

Keywords

APP(SW) transgenic mouse; fibrillar plaque; amyloid beta; microglial cell; neuronal degeneration; astrocytes; electron microscopy; Alzheimer disease

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Ultrastructural reconstruction of 27 fibrillar plaques in different stages of formation and maturation was undertaken to characterize the development of fibrillar plaques in the brains of human APP(SW) transgenic mice (Tg2576). The study suggests that microglial cells are not engaged in A beta removal and plaque degradation, but in contrast, are a driving force in plaque formation and development. Fibrillar A beta deposition at the amyloid pole of microglial cells appears to initiate three types of neuropil response: degeneration of neurons, protective activation of astrocytes, and attraction and activation or microglial cells sustaining plaque growth. Enlargement of neuronal processes and synapses with accumulation of degenerated mitochondria, dense bodies, and Hirano-type bodies is the marker of toxic injury of neurons by fibrillar A beta. Separation of amyloid cores from neurons and degradation of amyloid cores by cytoplasmic processes of hypertrophic astrocytes suggest the protective and defensive character of astrocytic response to fibrillar A beta. The growth of cored plaque from a small plaque with one microglial cell with an amyloid star. and a few dystrophic neurites to a large plaque formed by several dozen microglial cells seen in old mice is the effect of attraction and activation of microglial cells residing outside of the plaque perimeter. This mechanism of growth of plaques appears to be characteristic of cored plaques in transgenic mice. Other features in mouse microglial cells that are absent in human brain are clusters of vacuoles, probably of lysosomal origin. They evolve into circular cisternac and finally into large vacuoles filled with osmiophilic, amorphous material and bundles of fibrils that are poorly labeled with antibody to A beta. Microglial cells appear to release large amounts of fibrillar A beta acid accumulate traces of fibrillar A beta in a lysosomal pathway. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.

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