Evidence for the experimental transmission of cerebral beta-amyloidosis to primates.

HF Baker, RM Ridley, LW Duchen… - International journal …, 1993 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
HF Baker, RM Ridley, LW Duchen, TJ Crow, CJ Bruton
International journal of experimental pathology, 1993ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
The brains of three marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) injected intracerebrally 6-7 years earlier
with brain tissue from a patient with early onset Alzheimer's disease were found to contain
moderate numbers of amyloid plaques with associated argyrophilic dystrophic neurites and
cerebral amyloid angiopathy but no neurofibrillary tangles. The plaques and vascular
amyloid stained positively with antibodies to beta (A4)-protein. The brains of three age-
matched control marmosets from the same colony did not show these neuropathological …
Abstract
The brains of three marmosets (Callithrix jacchus) injected intracerebrally 6-7 years earlier with brain tissue from a patient with early onset Alzheimer's disease were found to contain moderate numbers of amyloid plaques with associated argyrophilic dystrophic neurites and cerebral amyloid angiopathy but no neurofibrillary tangles. The plaques and vascular amyloid stained positively with antibodies to beta (A4)-protein. The brains of three age-matched control marmosets from the same colony did not show these neuropathological features. The brain of one of two marmosets injected with brain tissue from a patient with prion disease with concomitant beta-amyloid plaques and cerebral amyloid angiopathy also showed beta-amyloid plaques and angiopathy but no spongiform encephalopathy. An occasional plaque was found in the brains of two of four marmosets injected with brain tissue from three elderly patients with age-related pathology, two of whom had an additional diagnosis of possible prion disease. Neither plaques nor cerebral amyloid angiopathy were found in six other marmosets who were older than the injected animals, in 12 further marmosets who were slightly younger but who had been injected several years previously with brain tissue which did not contain beta-amyloid, or in 10 younger marmosets who had been subjected to various neurosurgical procedures. These results suggest that cerebral beta-amyloidosis may be induced by the introduction of exogenous amyloid beta-protein.
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