How Amyloid Beta Reduces Plasticity Related To Synaptic Signaling

The early stages of Alzheimer’s disease are thought to occur at the synapse, since synapse loss is associated with memory dysfunction. Evidence suggests that amyloid beta (A?) plays an important role in early synaptic failure, but little has been understood about A?’s effect on the plasticity of .

These spines are short outgrowths of dendrites (extensions of neurons) that relay in the brain. A single neuron’s contains hundreds of thousands of spines, providing and transmission of signals across the synapse the junction where such occur. Plasticity of these spines, or the ability to change and grow, is essential for the transmission of signaling in the brain.

Researchers led by Roberto Malinow, MD, PhD, professor of and -Marcos Endowed Professor in Alzheimer’s Disease Research at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, have shed more light on how A?’s on the brain are related to its impact on the plasticity of dentritic spines. Their study was published on December 27 in the journal .

The researchers have shown that if A? is over-produced by either the pre-or post-synaptic side of the , it can cause . Secondly, these effects are over a distances of about 10 microns of the neuron affecting thousands and thousands of .

“We found that amyloid beta affects structural and not just functional, plasticity,” said Malinow. “Normally, plasticity can be induced, which makes stronger and bigger, but amyloid beta prevents this.”

According to Malinow, it also appears that of A? is required to prevent plasticity. “Even a short window of 30 to without A? secretion is enough to permit plasticity to occur,” he said. As A?’s effect on the critical for memory had been thought to be irreversible, this shows that there is a hope of change if scientists learn how to stop the secretion of A? at synaptic sites.”

“Our results show that the continuous production of A? at dendrites or axons acts locally to reduce the number and plasticity of ,” Malinow concluded.

Additional contributors to the study include first author Wei Wei, Watson School of Biological Sciences at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory; Louis N. Nguyen, Helmut W. Kessels and Hiroaki Hagiwara, Departments of and Biology at UC San Diego; and Sangram Sisodia, University of Chicago.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund and the Leslie C. Quick Fellowship.

Source: University of California

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