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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 2001, 21(13):4923-4930
Energy Hypometabolism in Posterior Cingulate Cortex of
Alzheimer's Patients: Superficial Laminar Cytochrome Oxidase
Associated with Disease Duration
J.
Valla1, 2,
Jason D.
Berndt1, and
F.
Gonzalez-Lima1
1 Institute for Neuroscience and Department of
Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712, and
2 Harrington Alzheimer's Disease Research Laboratory,
Arizona Alzheimer's Research Center, Phoenix, Arizona 85006
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ABSTRACT |
Among brain regions affected in Alzheimer's disease (AD), the
posterior cingulate shows the earliest and largest decrement in energy
metabolism. Positron emission tomography (PET) studies have
shown that these decrements appear before the onset of memory deficits
or other symptoms in persons at genetic risk for AD. This study
compares in vivo imaging results and in
situ postmortem analyses by examining the posterior cingulate
(area 23) in 15 AD patients and 13 age-matched nondemented controls
using quantitative cytochrome oxidase histochemistry as an
intracellular measure of oxidative energy metabolic capacity. Each of
the six layers of the posterior cingulate demonstrated a decline in
cytochrome oxidase activity in AD relative to controls, whereas
adjacent motor cortex showed no significant differences. This decrement did not appear to be mainly secondary to nonspecific decrement in
mitochondrial enzymes, oxidative stress, cell loss, or histopathology. The cytochrome oxidase decrement was most severe in the superficial layer I ( 39%), which demonstrated a correlation to disease duration. Covariance analyses suggest that superficial laminas undergo a functional uncoupling from the deeper layers of posterior cingulate cortex in AD, whereas no such effects are found in motor cortex or
controls. These findings expand on previous results from PET studies by
illuminating the layer-specific cytochrome oxidase contributions to
energy hypometabolism. The findings suggest a decrement of cytochrome
oxidase in posterior cingulate cortex, with progressive reduction
within the superficial laminas linked to disease duration. Such
decrement could contribute to some of the behavioral symptoms displayed
by AD patients. This decrement appeared greater in women.
Key words:
cytochrome oxidase; energy metabolism; posterior cingulate cortex; Alzheimer's disease; brain mapping; gender
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INTRODUCTION |
Decrements in energy metabolism are
one of the earliest detectable abnormalities in Alzheimer's disease
(AD). Positron emission tomography (PET) studies on subjects
homozygotic for the 4 allele of the apolipoprotein E (APOE)
gene, with no symptoms of AD, demonstrate metabolic reductions in
posterior cingulate, parietal, temporal, and prefrontal cortices
(Reiman et al., 1996 ; Small et al., 2000 ). Their largest decrement was
in the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) (Reiman et al., 1996 ), as in
the case of AD (Minoshima et al., 1994 ). Another PET study (Minoshima
et al., 1997 ) confirmed that although normal subjects show intense PCC
metabolic activity, early-stage AD patients suffered a PCC decrement
(21-22%) that was significantly greater than that seen in other
cortical regions. This greater hypometabolism determined by PET is not
merely an artifact of generalized atrophy (Ibanez et al., 1998 ) or AD
histopathology that is lower in PCC than the other regions (Braak and
Braak, 1998 ), although degeneration of PCC occurs in AD (Brun and
Gustafson, 1976 ). Severity of AD symptoms is correlated with
hypoactivity in PCC but not temporal regions, as measured with PET and
magnetic resonance imaging (Ishii et al., 1997 ; Hirono et al.,
1998 ; Alsop et al., 2000 ). PCC hypoperfusion was also shown by subjects
with only questionable dementia who later converted to AD in
longitudinal SPECT studies (Johnson et al., 1998 ; Kogure et al.,
2000 ). Cingulectomy has been linked to neglect and amnesia (Watson et
al., 1973 ), and PCC is critically involved in memory retrieval as shown
by PET studies (Nyberg et al., 1996 ; Cabeza et al., 1997 ). Together these studies suggest that regionally selective hypometabolism in PCC
may be an important early event in the progression of AD.
In AD certain regions and cells are more vulnerable than others are in
terms of energy metabolism but not histopathology (Gonzalez-Lima et
al., 1998ab ). For example, inferior colliculus neurons in AD patients
versus age-matched controls revealed a selective reduction in
cytochrome oxidase (CO) activity in dendritic neuropil around the
largest and most metabolically active cell bodies in the central nucleus (Gonzalez-Lima et al., 1997 ). CO is the mitochondrial enzyme
responsible for the activation of oxygen for aerobic energy metabolism
and provides an intracellular measure of oxidative metabolic capacity
because it is critically tied to ATP production inside mitochondria
(Wong-Riley, 1989 ). CO is primarily localized in mitochondria near
excitatory synapses in dendrites of neurons (Wong-Riley et al., 1998 ).
Given the selective CO decrements in dendritic neuropil of AD neurons,
it was of interest to investigate whether CO decrements may be
preferentially localized to dendritic-rich cortical layers. The ability
to do high-resolution laminar and cellular analyses is one large
advantage histochemistry has compared with in vivo imaging,
and as such, these techniques can complement one another. CO has been
used to examine densitometrically the hippocampus of AD patients
(Simonian and Hyman, 1993 ).
We assessed PCC laminar CO activity in AD patients and age-matched
nondemented controls. The objectives were: (1) to confirm that CO
activity shows more vulnerability in PCC than adjacent motor cortex, as
suggested by the predominant in vivo hypometabolism of PCC
in AD; (2) to investigate whether preferential CO decrement in
AD may be localized to superficial cortical layers, as suggested by the
predominance of CO in dendritic neuropil; and (3) to determine whether
CO effects are correlated with disease duration, as expected of events
relevant to AD progression.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects and samples. Frozen tissue samples from 28 subjects were either dissected by us without intermediate thawing at
the Sun Health Research Institute (Sun City, AZ) (23 cases) or received frozen from the Harvard Brain Tissue Resource Center (Belmont, MA) (5 cases). The acceptable postmortem interval (PMI) for inclusion was
restricted to <12 hr to reduce the variability of the enzyme activities. Age was restricted to 70 years in an effort to focus on
late-onset, sporadic forms of AD. Table 1
summarizes the age, gender, PMI, brain weight, APOE status, clinical
diagnosis, cause of death, and neuropathology findings available for
each case.
In the majority of cases, both area samples were dissected from the
same section, corresponding to the medial aspect of a coronal section
cut at the plane of the paracentral lobule dorsally and the posterior
end of the splenium ventrally. The dorsal sample corresponded to
Brodmann's area 4 in the paracentral lobule [primary motor cortex
(PMC)], and the ventral sample corresponded to Brodmann's area 23 in
the cingulate gyrus (PCC) (Fig.
1A). The investigated PCC is area 23 at the level of the splenium, not the retrosplenial cortex located posterior to the splenium. Occasionally a single area
was available in a subset of the subjects, as reflected in the sample
sizes reported below. This primary motor cortex region adjacent to PCC
was chosen as a comparison region because it has high baseline
metabolic activity similar to PCC, but it shows no significant
hypometabolism in AD (Minoshima et al., 1997 ).

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Figure 1.
A, Schematic diagram indicating the
sampling location for Brodmann's area 4 (PMC) and area 23 (PCC).
CC, Corpus callosum. B, Schematic
representation of the sampling from each layer of the cortex.
C, Sample of Nissl-stained cortex (area 4).
D, Sample of CO-stained cortex taken from a section
immediately adjacent to the tissue in C.
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Tissue processing. Initially, several frozen sections were
cut in various planes and Nissl-stained to determine a sectioning plane
perpendicular to the horizontal cortical layers. Subsequently, the rest
of the sample was sectioned into 40-µm-thick sections in this
perpendicular plane and picked up on clean slides in a Frigocut 2800 cryostat at 15°C. Several adjacent series were created for
analysis. One series was Nissl-stained with cresyl violet to aid with
the determination of the laminar structure, and adjacent series were
used for the histochemical stains. Experimenters were blind to the
subjects' disease condition in all analyses below.
Cytochrome oxidase histochemistry. A series of sections was
processed for CO quantitative histochemistry using previously described
procedures (Gonzalez-Lima and Jones, 1994 ; Gonzalez-Lima and Cada,
1994 , 1998 ; Gonzalez-Lima et al., 1997 ). Fresh-frozen tissue was used,
and preincubation fixation was restricted to 5 min because of its
detrimental effects on CO activity (Chalmers and Edgerton, 1989 ;
Gonzalez-Lima and Cada, 1998 ). Briefly, slides were first treated in
10% sucrose phosphate buffer (0.1 M, pH 7.6)
containing 0.5% glutaraldehyde (Grade II) for 5 min. Three changes at
5 min each of 10% phosphate buffer were followed by a preincubation
for 10 min in Tris buffer (0.05 M, pH 7.6) containing 275 mg/l cobalt
chloride, 10% sucrose, and 0.5% dimethylsulfoxide. The slides were
then rinsed for 5 min in phosphate buffer and incubated at 37°C for
90 min in 700 ml of an oxygen-saturated reaction solution containing
350 mg of diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride, 52.5 mg of cytochrome c,
35 gm of sucrose, 14 mg of catalase, and 1.75 ml of dimethylsulfoxide
in phosphate buffer. To stop the reaction and fix the tissue, a 30 min
immersion in 10% sucrose phosphate buffer with 4% formalin (v/v) was
used before dehydrating, clearing (xylene), and coverslipping with
Permount. Sections from AD and control subjects from the PCC were
stained in a single batch, and sections from PMC in AD and controls
were stained in another to remove the possibility of interbatch
variability as a confound in the comparison between subject groups. In
addition, there were no interbatch differences across the two regions,
as verified by the optical density (OD) of CO activity standards included in each batch. These same standards were used to convert tissue optical density measures to CO activity units via a regression equation based on their optical density and spectrophotometrically determined activity (Cada et al., 1995 ; Gonzalez-Lima and Cada, 1998 ).
Figure 1B shows the schematic sampling procedure for
image analysis. First, the slides were coded so that the operator was blind to subjects' identity and group membership. Second, to rule out
sampling bias because of better staining in the CO-stained regions, the
areas for measurement were selected in the adjacent Nissl-stained
sections. Selection was based on two morphological criteria: (1) the
region must be free from histological artifacts, and (2) the region
must show six well defined layers. Therefore, we sampled the most
histologically intact area within each sample, which may reduce the
differences between groups if the differences were caused by
degenerative changes. The same region selected for cell counting in the
Nissl-stained section was scanned in the adjacent CO-stained section by
overlapping a template with the morphological delineations and landmarks.
Laminar delineation was accomplished with a low magnification camera
lucida system using a six-layer definition of the cell populations in
PCC and PMC. The laminas were defined by cell typing and population
density by a single rater using the cresyl violet-stained sections.
Examples of Nissl- and CO-stained cortex are shown in Figure 1,
C and D, respectively.
The optical density of the CO-stained sections was analyzed using an
image processing system consisting of a CCD camera, DC-powered light
box, image capture board (Targa), and JAVA (Jandel Scientific, Corte
Madera, CA) image analysis software. The system was calibrated using an
optical density step tablet (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY), and
the images were corrected for optical distortions using a subtraction
of the background illumination. Six tissue optical density readings
were taken from each layer from a single section for each subject with
the aid of the overlaid camera lucida sketches. Each reading consisted
of the average of the pixel values in a square sampling window of
variable size. The size of the window was adjusted to encompass the
width of the laminas and ranged in size from 5 × 5 pixels
(~0.12 × 0.12 mm) to 19 × 19 pixels (~0.36 × 0.36 mm). The measurements were taken approximately equidistant across the
visible sample, and any tissue artifacts were avoided (Fig.
1B). Each subject received seven final scores: a mean
of the readings from each of the six laminas and a grand mean averaging across all six laminas. Statistical values are reported as mean ± SEM.
Comparisons between the genders and agonal states used the grand mean
scores of CO activity. Between-group multiple comparisons of the CO
activity in PCC and PMC were analyzed with two-tailed t
tests corrected for multiple comparisons with Hochberg's (1988) sharper Bonferroni procedure, as was the comparison between APOE 4
carriers and noncarriers. Within-group comparisons of laminar activity
within each region and group were done with the two-tailed Mann-Whitney U test. All correlations presented are Pearson
product moment correlations and their associated probability of being different from zero. To assess interlaminar correlations and
differences between correlations, each subject's laminar data were
normalized to an arbitrary overall average value of 100 to avoid
artificial inflation of the correlations caused by subject variation.
The correlation values found to be different from zero at
p < 0.05 were then compared for group differences
using an r-to-z transformation corrected for multiple comparisons with
Hochberg's (1988) sharper Bonferroni procedure.
Succinate dehydrogenase histochemistry. Succinate
dehydrogenase (SDH), complex II of the electron transport chain, may
also be affected in AD if our CO findings are attributable to a
nonspecific effect on mitochondrial enzymes. To further characterize
the specificity of our findings we chose to analyze the activity of
this mitochondrial enzyme in the region with the largest reduction of
CO activity, the PCC.
SDH histochemistry was performed on 40 µm frozen sections adjacent to
those used for CO histochemistry. The procedure was as follows: (1)
slides were placed directly from 20°C into 100 mM
PBS with 10% (w/v) sucrose. Three baths of 5 min each with graded temperature from ~4-22°C were used to bring the slides to
room temperature. (2) Slides were then transferred to PBS alone for 5 min. (3) Slides were incubated for 8 min at 37°C in the dark in the
following reaction solution: 48 mM sodium succinate, 1.059 gm of EDTA (disodium salt), 0.046 gm of sodium azide, 0.859 gm of
nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT), and 0.236 gm of 1-methoxyphenazine methylsulfate (mPMS) in 700 ml of double-distilled water. (4) The
reaction was stopped with 10% formalin in PBS for 30 min at 22°C.
(5) Slides were dehydrated in graded ethanol concentrations, 30, 50, 70, 95, 95, 100, and 100% in double-distilled water for 5 min each.
(6) Sections were cleared in xylene, with three changes, 5 min each,
and coverslipped with Permount.
Through the action of mPMS, an exogenous electron carrier, SDH
catalyzes the dielectronic reduction of NBT to an insoluble product,
formazan, which can be visualized as a dark blue stain. Within a
certain time course of the reaction, the accumulation of formazan does
not affect the forward rate of reaction significantly. Therefore,
endpoint measurements can be assumed to be linear with respect to
reaction time up to 10 min, as we have determined empirically for our
experimental conditions (data not shown).
The stained sections were analyzed for optical density with the same
imaging system used for the CO analysis. Areas of measurement proximal
to those used in the CO analysis were used. Deviations from the
procedure above include that a laminar breakdown was not done; instead
macroscopic average intensity measures encompassing ~2
mm2 across all layers were made. The CO
analysis was repeated in this manner to verify that no differences
resulting from experimental method would skew these results, and mean
CO results were the same with both methods. Data presented are
mean ± SE, and means were tested for a significant difference
using a two-tailed t test.
Heme oxygenase-1 immunohistochemistry. Heme oxygenase-1
(HO1) is a putative antioxidant enzyme induced by oxidative stress (Premkumar et al., 1995 ). HO1 catalyzes the breakdown of heme motifs to
form among other products, biliverdin, which is reduced to bilirubin, a
molecule of known antioxidant properties. To determine whether our CO
findings are attributable to a nonspecific effect of oxidative stress,
HO1 immunohistochemistry was performed in the posterior cingulate cortex.
Frozen tissue sections from AD and control subjects were stained for
the presence of HO1-reactive cells using on-the-slide immunohistochemistry. A polyclonal antibody, rabbit anti-rat HO1 (1:4000; 16 hr at 4°C; StressGen Biotech.Corp., Victoria, British Columbia, Canada) followed by biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:200)
and avidin-biotin-HRP (Vector Elite ABC kit; Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) served to label the protein. Sections were then incubated in a chromagen solution, 3,3'-diaminobenzidine
tetrahydrochloride (0.05%) in the presence of
H2O2 (0.0015%), for 8 min
at 22°C. Sections were dehydrated in graded ethanol concentrations,
cleared in xylenes, and coverslipped.
Using an analog camera attached to an Olympus Optical (Tokyo, Japan)
BX40 bright-field microscope at 40× magnification, images were
captured and imported into JAVA software for analysis. An area of
measurement across all layers (~2 mm2)
proximal to that used for CO and SDH histochemistry was delineated using the software. A pixel-by-pixel frequency histogram of ODs was
generated, and a background threshold was created for each subject by
selecting only those OD >1 SD above the mean. The object-counting feature of the software was then used to count the number of stained objects (cells) in this selected range. Adjacent stained pixels were
deemed one object, and single pixel objects were eliminated from the
overall count. The actual area sampled was recorded, and counts were
normalized to cells per square millimeter. There were no
significant group differences in the area sampled (data not shown).
Data presented are mean ± SE, and means were tested for a
significant difference using a two-tailed t test.
This protocol assumes that HO1 is not reorganized from a diffuse to
punctate spatial distribution between the control and pathological
cases. This assumption is supported by the work of other groups, which
indicate that HO1 immunoreactivity is coincident with reactive
astrocytosis and colocalizes with glial fibrillary acidic protein,
suggesting that it might be present in glial cells responding to
neurological insult (Smith et al., 1994 ). If this were true in the AD
cases, it would result in a greater number of immunoreactive objects
identified in the above protocol. Admittedly, HO1 is an indirect
measure of oxidative insult, but this analysis does provide us with
some indication that our findings are not those of generalized
transcriptional downregulation.
Cell counting in cresyl violet-stained sections. To
determine whether the CO activity decreases simply reflect cellular
degeneration, counts of Nissl-stained cells were obtained from the same
sections and regions used to demarcate the laminas for CO analysis as
described in the section of the CO methods. Areas of measurement across all layers (~2 mm2) used for the CO,
SDH, and HO1 analyses were used and counted using the microscope setup
and counting protocol as in the HO1 analysis. Counts were again
normalized to cells per square millimeter. As in that analysis, there
were no significant group differences in area sampled (data not shown).
This form of counting, although not suited for indicating the actual
number of cells, is sufficient to rule out group differences resulting
from pathological degeneration in the sampled area (Arendt et al.,
1983 ). Data presented are mean ± SE, and means were tested for a
significant difference using a two-tailed t test.
Amyloid plaque and neurofibrillary tangle histopathology. To
investigate whether CO activity was related to AD histopathology a
final series was stained with thioflavin S for a survey of amyloid plaque and neurofibrillary tangle pathology in the PCC. Slide-mounted sections were fixed in 4% formalin (v/v) for 30 min, followed by
pretreatment in 50% chloroform-50% ethanol for 1 hr. The slides were
passed through graded alcohols (10 sec each) to distilled water (5 min), and then to 0.1% thioflavin S (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) in
distilled water (10 min). Slides were differentiated in 80% ethanol
(10-12 sec), quickly rinsed in distilled water, and coverslipped with
an aqueous medium. Pathology was visualized on a Zeiss Universal
fluorescent microscope using a 10× objective. Severity was
semiquantitatively assessed on a seven-point scale ranging from 0 (none) to 6 (frequent), using the CERAD criteria as a guideline (Mirra
et al., 1991 ). Cored/neuritic plaques, diffuse plaques, and
neurofibrillary tangles were assessed separately, with each subject
receiving one score for each. Scores were correlated on a
subject-by-subject basis with laminar and mean CO activity in the AD
patients using Pearson product moment correlations, and their
probability of being different from zero was calculated.
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RESULTS |
Subjects and samples
The subject information (age, PMI, brain weight) was compared
between groups using two-tailed t tests. In the analysis of the PCC, the nondemented control group (n = 13)
consisted of seven males and six females with a mean ± SEM age of
81.2 ± 2.1 years, a mean PMI of 4.1 ± 0.7 hr, and a mean
brain weight of 1255 ± 48 gm. The AD group (n = 15) consisted of seven males and eight females with a mean age of
83.4 ± 1.4 years, a mean PMI of 4.2 ± 1.0 hr, and a mean
brain weight of 1060 ± 40 gm. AD patients' reports included
confirmation of AD histopathology and, for 12 of the 15 subjects, years
since diagnosis of AD (6.25 ± 0.9 years).
In the analysis of the PMC, the nondemented control group
(n = 12) consisted of seven males and five females with
a mean age of 80.7 ± 1.7 years, a mean PMI of 3.2 ± 0.2 hr,
and a mean brain weight of 1240 ± 51 gm. The AD group
(n = 12) consisted of six males and six females with a
mean age of 84.8 ± 1.3 years, a mean PMI of 4.0 ± 0.8 hr,
and a mean brain weight of 1051 ± 48 gm. Years since diagnosis
with AD = 6.25 ± 0.9 years (identical subset of subjects as
in PCC).
The AD subjects across both areas had decreased brain weight relative
to their age-matched controls (Student's two-tailed t = 2.7 in PMC, 3.2 in PCC; p < 0.05). No significant
differences existed in age across the groups in either area. No
difference was found in the PMI within the PCC subjects. In PMC, the AD
patients demonstrated a PMI significantly longer than controls
(t = 2.5; p < 0.05); however, the
actual time difference between the group means was inconsequential (<1 hr).
APOE status was available for the majority of the subjects. It may be
of interest to point out that the only control subject to carry an 4
allele also had the lowest mean CO value (57 U); however, in the AD
patients, there were no significant differences in CO activity between
4 carriers and noncarriers in any of the six layers, even before
correction for multiple comparisons (n = 12; Student's
two-tailed t test; p > 0.19).
The mean CO value was used to assess the contribution of agonal disease
state in the control group. Agonal state (as assessed via cause of
death when available) had no apparent effect on measured CO activity in
the controls. Those who died from relatively acute conditions (e.g.,
cardiac arrest, stroke) showed similar activity (n = 5;
78 ± 11 U) to those with more chronic agonal conditions (e.g.,
cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, degenerative joint
disease; n = 5; 104 ± 12 U; p > 0.13; two-tailed t test).
The mean CO value was used to assess the effect of gender within the
groups. Female AD patients (n = 8) demonstrated
significantly decreased CO activity relative to male AD patients
(n = 7) with 55 ± 3 and 68 ± 2 U,
respectively, in the PCC (Student's two-tailed t test,
3.3; p < 0.01; 19%). There was no similar
decrement in the PMC or in the control groups in either area. We also
performed a multivariate analysis to conclude that "gender" was an
independent and significant factor. We had no AD severity data, but we
performed this analysis using ANCOVA to covary out brain weight within
the AD group and compare across gender using the layer CO means, after excluding one outlier identified in the regression with a Studentized residual of 3.45. This analysis resulted in a highly significant effect of gender in the ANCOVA (p = 0.007;
n = 7 per group).
Cytochrome oxidase laminar analysis
The results of the laminar analysis are presented in Table
2. Light microscopic examination of the
CO histochemistry in the PCC and PMC showed that our procedure stains
very few cell bodies and that the stain was essentially found
exclusively in neuropil distributed across all the cortical laminas.
Because CO is a marker of excitatory synaptic activity, the predominant
neuropil staining is in line with the majority of the excitatory
synapses in these cortical areas being axodendritic as opposed to
axosomatic (Wong-Riley et al., 1998 ).
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Table 2.
Mean (SEM) of laminar cytochrome oxidase activity units
(micromoles per minute per gram of tissue wet weight) in human
postmortem posterior cingulate (area 23) and primary motor cortex (area
4) in AD patients and age-matched controls
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In the PCC, each layer (I-VI) showed significant CO activity decrements
in the AD patients relative to the controls (p < 0.05). Layers I and II showed relatively more hypometabolism
(p < 0.01), and layer I demonstrated a
statistically greater decrement relative to layers III, IV, V, and VI
in the AD group (Mann-Whitney U tests; p < 0.05). Averaging across the laminas for each subject revealed a
significant overall mean activity decrease in the AD PCC of 28%
(p < 0.01) relative to the age-matched
controls. A similar but nonsignificant trend was seen in the PMC. None
of the PMC layers were significantly different between AD and controls.
Correlation matrices were constructed for normalized CO activity in
each group and area (Table 3).
Correlations between layers were found different from zero at
p < 0.05 in both areas and both groups. Comparing the
groups using an r-to-z transformation highlighted three significant
(p < 0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons) changes in the correlative pattern in the PCC, indicating that the
relationships between the laminas were altered by the disease process.
The patterns of significant correlations were nearly identical across
groups in the PMC with no correlations significantly different between
groups after correction for multiple comparisons.
To investigate the influence of the patients' age and the duration
over which they had been diagnosed with AD, those measures were
correlated against CO activity in the PCC. There was no relationship between age and CO activity in AD or controls in the limited age range
we studied. However, the duration of AD was inversely related to the
severity of the decline of CO activity in layer I of the PCC
(r = 0.68; p = 0.01), i.e., the
longer the disease duration, the lower the CO activity (Table
4). No significant correlations were
found in PMC.
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Table 4.
Pearson correlations between cytochrome oxidase activity
and subject age and duration of disease in AD patients
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Succinate dehydrogenase analysis
SDH, the other mitochondrial electron transport enzyme measured,
showed no significant differences between AD and controls in the PCC
region showing the CO decrement. The SDH mean ± SEM activity (OD
units × 100) was 2.81 ± 0.17 in controls and 2.56 ± 0.11 in AD patients (p = 0.24). However, CO
activity (OD units × 100) reanalyzed in exactly the same way as
SDH activity showed a highly significant group difference
(p = 0.0017) between controls (1.64 ± 0.06) and AD patients (1.39 ± 0.03).
Heme oxygenase-1 analysis
HO1, the other oxidoreductase enzyme measured that is induced by
oxidative stress, showed no significant differences between AD and
controls in the PCC region showing the CO decrement. The HO1 mean ± SEM expression (immunostained cell bodies per
mm2) was 202 ± 11 in controls and
187 ± 7 in AD patients (p = 0.30).
Cell counting analysis
The number of Nissl-stained cells, counted to determine whether
cell loss could account for the CO decrement in the sampled PCC region,
showed no significant differences between AD and controls. The
mean ± SEM number of cells (Nissl-stained cell bodies per square
millimeter) was 483 ± 27 in controls and 478 ± 14 in AD patients (p = 0.87). We sampled the most
histologically intact areas of the PCC to specifically rule out that
any CO decrements could be accounted for by nonspecific cell loss or
artifacts in the sampled areas. Thus, the point we made is that our
sampled areas differ in CO but do not differ in cell body counts; it is not whether overall PCC degenerative changes may exist in AD as compared with controls.
Histopathological analysis
To investigate the influence of the neuropathological burden on CO
activity in the PCC, the three semiquantitative measures of
thioflavin-stained cored/neuritic plaques, diffuse plaques, and
neurofibrillary tangles were correlated against the laminar and mean CO
activity measures in the AD patients. No significant correlations were
found (p > 0.05). In spite of significantly (p < 0.05) greater histopathology in the AD
group in every measure (cored/neuritic plaques: control, 1.54 ± 0.14, AD, 3.86 ± 0.06; diffuse plaques: control, 1.23 ± 0.15, AD, 3.79 ± 0.14; tangles: control, 0.15 ± 0.04, AD,
3.21 ± 0.19), there were no relationships between subject CO
activity and histopathological measures on a subject-by-subject basis.
We also performed a principal components analysis as used by Vogt et
al. (1998) . Although we did not have laminar histopathology scores and
thus could not define Vogt's subtypes, we performed the principal
components with the CO scores. This indicated no subtypes; that is, all
six layers contributed significantly to the first principal component.
A distinctive finding of our study is the lack of correlation between
traditional AD histopathology and CO activity. Thus, it is not
surprising that the CO findings do not resemble Vogt's subtypes based
on histopathology.
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DISCUSSION |
The results suggest that prominent reductions in energy metabolism
seen in the PCC in PET studies of probable AD cases may be caused by CO
decrements that are more severe in the superficial laminas. This study
was the first to quantify CO activity histochemically in PCC frozen
samples from confirmed dementia cases of the AD-type and age-matched
nondemented controls. As anticipated, CO activity showed a greater
decrement in PCC than PMC, in agreement with PET studies showing
prominent hypometabolism in the PCC in AD patients (Minoshima et al.,
1997 ). A reduced CO activity is consistent with an energy metabolic
dysfunction in the PCC of AD patients. However, our control data
suggest this CO decrement in PCC may not be mainly attributable to
nonspecific factors such as loss of cells or general decrements in
other oxidoreductase enzymes. For example, the other respiratory enzyme
measured, SDH, is part of the electron transport chain in the inner
mitochondrial membrane (complex II), and nonspecific local effects on
CO (complex IV) should have affected SDH activity in a similar way.
Similarly, it appears unlikely that other nonspecific effects such as
oxidative stress and oxygen utilization in the PCC may explain our CO
results. For example, HO1 induction should have been affected because
this enzyme incorporates oxygen to heme under conditions of oxidative stress, as demonstrated in other brain regions in AD patients (Smith et
al., 1994 ). Although our data from control analyses cannot rule out all
possible explanations, together with the CO and PET data, the data on
number of Nissl-stained cells, HO1-immunostained cells, and SDH
histochemical activity suggest that AD patients exhibit a preferential
CO decrement in the PCC. Table 1 also included six patients with
premature death (heart failure, pneumonia, cerebral vascular accident)
during the course of their AD, suggesting that our CO findings likely
do not represent a simple end-stage phenomenon. Indeed, metabolic
decrements in PCC have been shown to exist very early in the course of
AD (Minoshima et al., 1994 , 1997 ; Reiman et al., 1996 ), and
longitudinal studies show PCC dysfunction as a clinical predictor for
later AD (Johnson et al., 1998 ; Kogure et al., 2000 ) that is correlated
with severity of symptoms (Alsop et al., 2000 ).
Specificity of the CO decrement is also suggested by the lack of
correlation between CO activity and histopathological measures. No
relationship was found between CO activity and the presence of amyloid
plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the PCC. This dissociation is
important because the early hypometabolism seen in PCC in PET studies
is greater than that found in other regions, although traditional AD
histopathology is lower in PCC than other regions such as the temporal
cortex (Braak and Braak, 1998 ). In AD temporal cortex, Hatanpaa et al.
(1998) quantified CO subunit III mRNA in neurons in close proximity to
neuritic plaques. They found no reduction in mRNA levels in the
proximal neurons or their processes compared with more plaque-distant
neurons. However, Hatanpaa et al. (1996) found levels of CO mRNA
decreased by 26% in neurons bearing early-stage neurofibrillary
tangles compared with tangle-free neurons. Unsurprisingly,
tangle-bearing neurons do not produce as much CO, and likely other
enzymes and proteins, as tangle-free neurons. Obviously any energy
hypometabolism in these neurons may be simply secondary to the abnormal
intracellular tangles. However, this did not appear to be the case in
the PCC where the CO decrement was not associated with plaques or
tangles. Thus, both the PET and CO data suggest that histopathology
alone cannot account for PCC hypometabolism. The lack of correlation between the presence of AD neuropathological changes and CO decreases in PCC is important because it questions the linkage between
traditional AD histopathology and functional disruption in AD.
Two principal mechanisms may explain decreases in CO activity in AD
brains: one is a nonspecific, secondary mechanism caused by reduced
energy demand, and the other is a specific, primary mechanism caused by
CO catalytic impairment. The first one may be secondary to
neurofibrillary tangles or any process that may downregulate CO
activity. For example, reduced neuronal activity and synaptic loss
would downregulate CO and other enzymes of oxidative phosphorylation.
One way to evaluate the contribution of this secondary effect is to
measure other enzymes of oxidative phosphorylation, as done with SDH in
this study. Clearly this secondary reduction in CO activity is not
specific to AD (Kish et al., 1999 ) and can be manipulated in
experimental animals by denervation or functional decreases in neuronal
activity (Wong-Riley, 1989 ). This secondary mechanism does not appear
to be the only one in PCC because a neuronal downregulation should have
affected SDH activity or some of the other measures besides CO activity.
The second mechanism that may compromise CO activity in certain brain
regions more than others may involve a primary CO catalytic impairment.
We speculate that this primary mechanism appears likely to contribute
to our findings in PCC for several reasons (Gonzalez-Lima et al.,
1998ab ). First, a catalytic abnormality in CO has been found in AD
brains (Parker et al., 1994b ) as well as peripheral AD tissues where it
is much less likely to have resulted from secondary neuronal
downregulation or another nonspecific cause. This primary CO impairment
in AD cells cannot be attributable to nonspecific neuron atrophy or
loss because it has been found in non-neural cells, such as platelets
(Parker et al., 1990 , 1994a ), fibroblasts (Curti et al., 1997 ), and
skeletal muscle (Gonzalez-Lima et al., 1998b ). A CO decrement in these
various peripheral tissues indicates that a CO impairment may exist in
addition to any local neuropathology or neuronal atrophy in the AD
brain. However, denervation and neuropathology affecting synaptic
function in any given region are likely to secondarily enhance any
primary CO decrement in that region. Second, a primary CO impairment in
AD would not affect all cells equally; vulnerability would hinge on the
reliance of the cell on aerobic metabolism and possibly its ability to
ameliorate and/or withstand oxidative stress (Shoffner and Wallace,
1994 ). Thus, a CO impairment in AD may affect preferentially certain organs (like brain), cell types (like pyramidal neurons), and regions
(like PCC) that are more dependent on CO for oxidative energy
metabolism (Gonzalez-Lima et al., 1998ab ). For example, systemic
administration in animals of sodium azide, a CO activity inhibitor,
have been shown to produce deficits in maze learning and memory but no
motor deficits (Bennett and Rose, 1992 ; Bennett et al., 1992a ,b ), as
well as different degrees of CO inhibition in different brain regions
(Cada et al., 1995 ). Preferential vulnerability to CO impairments in
some brain regions may also be related to their differential expression
of CO genes (Chandrasekaran et al., 1994 ). Therefore, perhaps the most
reasonable explanation for the preferential hypometabolism observed in
the PCC in PET studies and in the current study may be a synergy
between a primary CO catalytic abnormality and a secondary neuronal
downregulation caused by atrophy and denervation of synapses.
Separating the contribution of each of these factors to the overall
decrease in CO activity may be difficult, but effort should be
dedicated to this end because CO could be an attractive target for
therapeutic intervention.
This study also showed that CO decrements in AD were localized mainly
to layer I. This is a synapse-rich molecular layer with predominant
dendritic neuropil as opposed to cell bodies, a fact that may
contribute to its vulnerability. Aging is the major risk factor for AD;
so it is interesting that layer I appears most vulnerable to aging
effects. Peters et al. (1998) showed a 30-60% reduction in synapse
density in layer I in old monkeys, particularly indicating that spiny
synapses that belong to the apical dendritic tufts of pyramidal cells
are degenerating in old age. In the PCC, pyramidal neurons most
vulnerable to atrophy in AD have their tufts of apical dendrites in
layer I (Brun and Englund, 1981 ). Pyramidal cells also show the
greatest degree of neurofibrillary tangle histopathology in AD (Hof et
al., 1990 ; Van Hoesen, 1990 ; Braak and Braak, 1998 ). A combination of
layer 1 aging effects (Peters et al., 1998 ) and AD-vulnerable pyramidal
neurons with dendrites in layer I may also contribute to the
preferential CO decrements in layer I in AD compared with age-matched
controls. The observed CO decrement in layer I was correlated with
disease duration, as expected of events relevant to AD progression. It would also be beneficial to assess the relationship between CO activity
and dementia severity. To our knowledge, no such work has been done to
date, and no severity information was available for our subjects.
However CO decrement in the PCC was correlated with disease duration,
and disease duration is accompanied by a progressive increase in
symptom severity and PCC hypoperfusion (Alsop et al., 2000 ),
reinforcing the possibility that dementia severity could be related to
CO decrements.
Finally, CO activity was ~20% lower in the PCC of female compared
with male AD subjects. This gender effect was AD-specific in that the
control subjects did not demonstrate such a disparity and
region-specific in that it was not found in the PMC in either group.
Demographic studies support the idea that females have an increased
vulnerability to AD (Launer et al., 1999 ; Letenneur et al., 1999 ). It
is hoped that CO may soon become a useful marker of metabolic
vulnerability in subjects at risk for AD using new in vivo
noninvasive imaging (Heekeren et al., 1999 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 30, 2000; revised April 17, 2001; accepted April 19, 2001.
This work was supported by Texas Advanced Technology Program Grant 361 and National Institutes of Health Grant R01 NS37755 to F.G.L. We thank
the Sun Health Research Institute (Sun City, AZ) and the Harvard Brain
Tissue Resource Center, supported in part by Public Health Service
Grant MH/NS 31862 (Belmont, MA) for donating the tissue. We also
thank Alison M. Crane at University of Texas at Austin and Lucia Sue at
the Sun Health Research Institute for their technical assistance. This
study was submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the
PhD degree of J. Valla at the University of Texas at Austin.
Correspondence should be addressed to F. Gonzalez-Lima, Professor and
Head, Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin, Mezes
Hall 330, Austin, TX 78712. E-mail: gonzalezlima{at}psy.utexas.edu.
J. D. Berndt's present address: Neuroscience Program, University of
Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706.
 |
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L. Mosconi, S. Sorbi, B. Nacmias, M.T.R. De Cristofaro, M. Fayyaz, E. Cellini, S. Bagnoli, L. Bracco, K. Herholz, and A. Pupi
Brain metabolic differences between sporadic and familial Alzheimer's disease
Neurology,
October 28, 2003;
61(8):
1138 - 1140.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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G. Pigino, G. Morfini, A. Pelsman, M. P. Mattson, S. T. Brady, and J. Busciglio
Alzheimer's Presenilin 1 Mutations Impair Kinesin-Based Axonal Transport
J. Neurosci.,
June 1, 2003;
23(11):
4499 - 4508.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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H. K. Anandatheerthavarada, G. Biswas, M.-A. Robin, and N. G. Avadhani
Mitochondrial targeting and a novel transmembrane arrest of Alzheimer's amyloid precursor protein impairs mitochondrial function in neuronal cells
J. Cell Biol.,
April 14, 2003;
161(1):
41 - 54.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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H. Atamna, D. W. Killilea, A. N. Killilea, and B. N. Ames
Heme deficiency may be a factor in the mitochondrial and neuronal decay of aging
PNAS,
November 12, 2002;
99(23):
14807 - 14812.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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W. J. Jagust, J. L. Eberling, C. C. Wu, A. Finkbeiner, D. Mungas, P. E. Valk, and M. N. Haan
Brain function and cognition in a community sample of elderly Latinos
Neurology,
August 13, 2002;
59(3):
378 - 383.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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