Fighting Fire With Fire—Transthyretin Therapy for Aβ?
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Transthyretin is one of a handful of proteins that, like amyloid-β, can adopt a β-sheet conformation and aggregate as amyloid. So it may seem counterintuitive that transthyretin could be used to prevent Aβ toxicity, yet that is exactly the proposition of a paper in this week’s PNAS online. Researchers led by Joel Buxbaum at The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California, report that transthyretin (TTR) protects against Aβ pathology in mice. They suggest that TTR works like a chaperone and hint that this activity might lead to new therapeutic approaches to treating Alzheimer disease.
Transthyretin is a serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) carrier that binds thyroid hormones and other small molecules. It also binds to Aβ in the CSF (see Schwarzman et al., 1994), is found adjacent to Aβ plaques in transgenic mice, and prevents Aβ aggregation in C. elegans (see Link, 1995). In addition, Aβ deposition speeds up when one copy of TTR is deleted in APP/presenilin double transgenic (APPSwe/PS1δE9) mice (see Choi et al., 2007), so the idea that transthyretin may be protective in AD is not new. Now, Buxbaum and colleagues show that overexpressing TTR is also protective in mice and that TTR physically binds to Aβ, which supports the notion that “increasing cerebral TTR synthesis is a potential therapeutic/prophylactic approach to human AD,” as the authors suggest.
Buxbaum and colleagues evaluated the offspring of APP23 transgenic mice (expressing human APP carrying the Swedish mutation) crossed with animals overexpressing human TTR. They also evaluated what happens when TTR is missing by testing APP23 mice generated in a mouse TTR-negative background. The investigators found that overexpressing human TTR protects mice against cognitive and spatial deficits. In the Barnes maze test, 15-month-old APP23 animals had more errors and fared more poorly in finding the escape hole than did wild-type animals. APP23 mice overexpressing human TTR performed about as well as wild-type controls, indicating a protective effect of transthyretin. Lack of endogenous mouse TTR had the opposite effect. Younger (5.5 months old) APP23 mice performed about as well as controls, but in the absence of mouse TTR the animals made significant errors.
Immunohistochemical analysis indicates that these behavioral changes are related to Aβ pathology. While APP23 animals normally have Aβ deposits by 16 months, three out of 24 APP23/hTTR animals had no detectable deposits by that age, and in those that had detectable deposits, they were significantly fewer (around half), and soluble Aβ levels were also about half compared to control APP23 animals. In contrast, the researchers found detectable Aβ deposits in seven of 11 5.5-month-old APP23 mice lacking endogenous TTR—Aβ deposits are normally very rare in mice at that age. The amount of formic acid-soluble Aβ was nearly doubled in the mTTR-negative mice as well.
Correlating Aβ levels and deposits with TTR does mean the two proteins react physically, but the researchers showed, using surface plasmon resonance, that TTR interacts with Aβ monomers (both Aβ40 and Aβ42) and fibrils. Interestingly, mouse TTR had much higher affinity for any Aβ form than did human TTR.
All told, the findings indicate that TTR can ameliorate the pathology and behavioral symptoms associated with Aβ overproduction in a mammalian model. “It appears that the interaction is physical and that TTR may behave in a chaperone-like manner for molecular species of Aβ larger than monomers. The observations support the novel notion that increasing cerebral TTR synthesis is a potential therapeutic/prophylactic approach to human AD,” write the authors.—Tom Fagan
Comments
Transthyretin is an abundant blood protein that binds and transports thyroid hormones. It has been known for a number of years that transthyretin can also bind the β amyloid peptide (Aβ) associated with Alzheimer disease. Both in vitro studies and in vivo studies using the nematode worm C. elegans have shown that transthyretin can inhibit the aggregation of Aβ into insoluble amyloid fibers. This study by Buxbaum et al. uses transgenic mouse models to demonstrate that increased expression of transthyretin can protect transgenic mice from behavioral deficits caused by Aβ expression, and loss of transthyretin expression exacerbates these behavioral deficits. These studies support the idea that transthyretin might have a natural role as a chaperone protein for Aβ, serving to combat the aggregation of Aβ into amyloid or some other toxic form.
Could manipulation of transthyretin expression in people help protect them from Alzheimer disease? This is a tricky question, because paradoxically transthyretin itself is associated with amyloid disease. Familial amyloid polyneuropathy, a fatal disease, is caused by mutations in transthyretin that cause the transthyretin protein itself to form amyloid. Normal (not mutated) transthyretin can also form amyloid deposits in the heart and brain, as is observed in cases of systemic senile amyloidosis. Interestingly, small heat shock proteins, classic chaperone proteins that can inhibit Aβ from forming amyloid, also form insoluble deposits by themselves under appropriate conditions. Perhaps proteins evolved to interact with aggregation-prone proteins become predisposed to aggregate themselves. These considerations suggest that manipulation of the expression transthyretin (or other putative Aβ chaperone proteins) might be therapeutic, but might require careful titration of the expression of these proteins. This study also raises the possibility that reduced expression of transthyretin might be a risk factor for developing Alzheimer disease.
View all comments by Chris LinkLife and Health Sciences Research Institute (ICVS), School of Health Sciences, University of Minho
Transthyretin (TTR) is a blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) carrier protein for thyroxine and retinol (in association with the retinol-binding protein). In the last few years an increasing number of reports have linked TTR to Alzheimer disease (AD). Specifically, TTR has been suggested as a neuroprotective factor for disease progression, given its ability to sequester and clear the amyloid-β peptide (Aβ) out of the brain.
This article generally confirms the previous reports for a role of TTR in AD. The study shows that 1) in the absence of TTR there is increased amyloid load in the brain of APP transgenic mice; 2) overexpression of 90 copies of the human TTR gene in APP transgenic mice decreases amyloid load; 3) TTR overexpression in APP transgenic mice reverts the cognitive impairment normally observed in this animal model of AD. Of note, this study confirms a previous one (1) in which the absence of TTR was shown to accelerate the memory decline normally associated with age. This may be related to a TTR function that is ”independent of its interaction with Aβ,” as recognized by Buxbaum et al.
This last observation points to a function of TTR in behavior that may be unrelated to its ability to sequester Aβ and prevent Aβ deposition. Therefore, the role of TTR in preventing Aβ deposition may not be connected to the cognitive performance improvement observed in APP transgenic mice overexpressing TTR.
As for the role of TTR in preventing amyloid deposition, shown in at least two studies (this one and [2]), it is of relevance to discuss the origin of TTR within the brain. Within the brain, TTR expression is restricted to the choroid plexus (from where it is secreted towards the CSF) (2) and the meninges (4). It is therefore important to clarify whether the overexpression of TTR (90 copies of the gene) in mice originates the synthesis of the protein in other, “non-natural” sites of the brain parenchyma, which may be misleading in interpreting the role of TTR in AD.
TTR, among other CSF proteins (cystatin C, apolipoprotein J, and insulin growth factor 1, [5-7]) is reported to be protective in AD, not only by sequestering Aβ from reaching concentrations that may promote deposition as amyloid, but also by facilitating Aβ clearance out of the brain through receptors located both in the choroid plexus (7) and in the endothelial cells of the blood-brain barrier (8). It is therefore reasonable to suggest that increasing the levels of these proteins might be a therapeutic approach in AD. However, this possibility raises main concerns, of which two should certainly be investigated carefully. First, all these proteins have well-described physiological functions, some of which relate to behavior. Increasing their concentrations may pose health risks higher than the potential benefit for AD. Second, it is necessary to further study whether and how these CSF proteins can successfully reach the major brain sites of amyloid deposition in AD.
References:
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View all comments by Joao Sousa