4.8 Article

Cellular prion protein mediates impairment of synaptic plasticity by amyloid-β oligomers

Journal

NATURE
Volume 457, Issue 7233, Pages 1128-U84

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature07761

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Brown-Coxe Postdoctoral Fellow
  2. NIH [5T32GN07205]
  3. Kavli Institute for Neuroscience at Yale University
  4. Falk Medical Research Trust
  5. NIDA

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A pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease is an accumulation of insoluble plaque containing the amyloid-beta peptide of 40-42 amino acid residues(1). Prefibrillar, soluble oligomers of amyloid-beta have been recognized to be early and key intermediates in Alzheimer's-disease-related synaptic dysfunction(2-9). At nanomolar concentrations, soluble amyloid-beta oligomers block hippocampal long-term potentiation(7), cause dendritic spine retraction from pyramidal cells(5,8) and impair rodent spatial memory(2). Soluble amyloid-beta oligomers have been prepared from chemical syntheses, transfected cell culture supernatants, transgenic mouse brain and human Alzheimer's disease brain(2,4,7,9). Together, these data imply a high-affinity cell-surface receptor for soluble amyloid-beta oligomers on neurons-one that is central to the pathophysiological process in Alzheimer's disease. Here we identify the cellular prion protein (PrPC) as an amyloid-beta-oligomer receptor by expression cloning. Amyloid-beta oligomers bind with nanomolar affinity to PrPC, but the interaction does not require the infectious PrPSc conformation. Synaptic responsiveness in hippocampal slices from young adult PrP null mice is normal, but the amyloid-beta oligomer blockade of long-term potentiation is absent. Anti-PrP antibodies prevent amyloid-beta-oligomer binding to PrPC and rescue synaptic plasticity in hippocampal slices from oligomeric amyloid-beta. Thus, PrPC is a mediator of amyloid-beta-oligomer-induced synaptic dysfunction, and PrPC-specific pharmaceuticals may have therapeutic potential for Alzheimer's disease.

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