Conference Proceedings

Mechanisms of amyloid deposition in Alzheimer's disease

K Beyreuther, AI Bush, T Dyrks, C Hilbich, G Konig, U Monning, G Multhaup, R Prior, B Rumble, W Schubert, DH Small, A Weidemann, CL Masters

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | NEW YORK ACAD SCIENCES | Published : 1991

Abstract

At the cellular level, Alzheimer's disease (AD) must be the result of neuronal dysfunction and degeneration leading to a reduction in synaptic density. Filamentous deposits of amyloid, which define the disease at the molecular level, occur within perikarya, axons, dendrites, and terminals of neurons as neurofibrillary tangles (NFT), in the extracellular neuropil as amyloid plaques (APC), and around blood vessels as amyloid congophilic angiopathy (ACA). These fibrillar amyloid protein aggregates are also found in the brain of all individuals with Down's syndrome after the age of 30 years. The amyloid deposits apparently occur in the terminal zones of neurons that develop NFT. It is suggested ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers