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Neurobiology
Synaptic Amyloid-β Oligomers Precede p-Tau and Differentiate High Pathology Control Cases

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Amyloid-β (Aβ) and hyperphosphorylated tau (p-tau) aggregates form the two discrete pathologies of Alzheimer disease (AD), and oligomeric assemblies of each protein are localized to synapses. To determine the sequence by which pathology appears in synapses, Aβ and p-tau were quantified across AD disease stages in parietal cortex. Nondemented cases with high levels of AD-related pathology were included to determine factors that confer protection from clinical symptoms. Flow cytometric analysis of synaptosome preparations was used to quantify Aβ and p-tau in large populations of individual synaptic terminals. Soluble Aβ oligomers were assayed by a single antibody sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Total in situ Aβ was elevated in patients with early- and late-stage AD dementia, but not in high pathology nondemented controls compared with age-matched normal controls. However, soluble Aβ oligomers were highest in early AD synapses, and this assay distinguished early AD cases from high pathology controls. Overall, synapse-associated p-tau did not increase until late-stage disease in human and transgenic rat cortex, and p-tau was elevated in individual Aβ-positive synaptosomes in early AD. These results suggest that soluble oligomers in surviving neocortical synaptic terminals are associated with dementia onset and suggest an amyloid cascade hypothesis in which oligomeric Aβ drives phosphorylated tau accumulation and synaptic spread. These results indicate that antiamyloid therapies will be less effective once p-tau pathology is developed.

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Supported by NIH grants AG27465 (K.H.G.), NS038328 (D.B.T.), and AG041295 (D.B.T.); National Institute on Aging (NIA) grants AG18879 (C.A.M.) and AG34628 (jointly sponsored by the NIA, American Federation for Aging Research, the John A. Hartford Foundation, the Atlantic Philanthropies, the Starr Foundation, and an anonymous donor; to E.T.); the Jim Easton Consortium for Alzheimer's Drug Discovery and Biomarkers (D.B.T.); University of California Los Angeles Clinical and Translational Science Institute (UCLA CTSI) grant UL1TR000124 (E.Y.H.); UCLA Older Americans Independence Center grant P30 AG028748 (E.Y.H.); and the Daljit S. and Elaine Sarkaria Chair in Diagnostic Medicine (H.V.V.). Tissue was obtained from the AD Research Center Neuropathology Cores NIA grants P50 AG05142 (USC), P50 AG16970 (UCLA), and P50 AG16573 (UC Irvine). Flow cytometry was performed in the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center (JCCC) and Center for AIDS Research Flow Cytometry Core Facility, supported by NIH grants CA16042 and AI 28697 and by the JCCC, the UCLA AIDS Institute, the David Geffen School of Medicine, and the Chancellor's Office at UCLA. Diagnosis, characterization, and follow-up of >90 study subjects was supported by NIA grant R01AG21055.

Disclosures: None declared.