Abstract

Alzheimer's disease constitutes a rising threat to public health. Despite extensive research in cellular and animal models, identifying the pathogenic agent present in the human brain and showing that it confers key features of Alzheimer's disease has not been achieved. We extracted soluble amyloid-beta protein (Abeta) oligomers directly from the cerebral cortex of subjects with Alzheimer's disease. The oligomers potently inhibited long-term potentiation (LTP), enhanced long-term depression (LTD) and reduced dendritic spine density in normal rodent hippocampus. Soluble Abeta from Alzheimer's disease brain also disrupted the memory of a learned behavior in normal rats. These various effects were specifically attributable to Abeta dimers. Mechanistically, metabotropic glutamate receptors were required for the LTD enhancement, and N-methyl D-aspartate receptors were required for the spine loss. Co-administering antibodies to the Abeta N-terminus prevented the LTP and LTD deficits, whereas antibodies to the midregion or C-terminus were less effective. Insoluble amyloid plaque cores from Alzheimer's disease cortex did not impair LTP unless they were first solubilized to release Abeta dimers, suggesting that plaque cores are largely inactive but sequester Abeta dimers that are synaptotoxic. We conclude that soluble Abeta oligomers extracted from Alzheimer's disease brains potently impair synapse structure and function and that dimers are the smallest synaptotoxic species.

Keywords

Long-term potentiationDendritic spineHippocampusSynaptic plasticityNeuroscienceAlzheimer's diseaseGlutamate receptorAmyloid (mycology)SynapseChemistryCerebral cortexAmyloid betaReceptorBiologyBiochemistryMedicineDiseaseInternal medicinePeptideHippocampal formation

MeSH Terms

Alzheimer DiseaseAmyloid beta-PeptidesAnimalsBrainDendritic SpinesDimerizationHippocampusHumansLearningMemoryMiceNeuronal PlasticityNeuronsRatsSynapses

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Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
article
Volume
14
Issue
8
Pages
837-842
Citations
3555
Access
Closed

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Citation Metrics

3555
OpenAlex
70
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3072
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Cite This

Ganesh M. Shankar, Shaomin Li, Tapan Mehta et al. (2008). Amyloid-β protein dimers isolated directly from Alzheimer's brains impair synaptic plasticity and memory. Nature Medicine , 14 (8) , 837-842. https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1782

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/nm1782
PMID
18568035
PMCID
PMC2772133

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%