Thursday, 3 April 2003

This presentation is part of : Clinical neurosciences in aging and dementia: from research to practice

Immunity and Neurons: New Evidence Relating Immunoglobulins to Cytoskeletal Damage

Constantin Bouras, Psychiatry, Psychiatry, University of Geneva School of Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland

Although previous studies have suggested an increased activation of humoral immunity in neurodegenerative diseases, it remains unclear whether this phenomenon is secondary to lesion formation or contributes directly to their development. Using stereotaxic injections in macaque monkey cerebral cortex, we studied the effects of human immunoglobulins (Ig) on the neuronal cytoskeleton. Under these conditions, several MC-1-immunoreactive axons were observed in the vicinity of injection site. No MC-1 or TG-3 staining was detected in neuronal soma. Ultrastructurally, several axons in the same area displayed curly formations and accumulation of twisted tubules but not paired helical filaments. These data suggest that Fc fragment induce conformational changes of tau and subtle structural alterations in axons in this model. Immunocytochemical analyses in human autopsy materials revealed the presence of human Fc fragments, as well as Fc receptors only in large pyramidal neurons known to be vulnerable in brain aging further supporting a possible role of immunoglobulins in neurodegeneration.

Back to Clinical neurosciences in aging and dementia: from research to practice
Back to Symposia
Back to The IPA European Regional Meeting (1-4 April 2003) of IPA