Histo: Neurodegeneration Flashcards
What are prion diseases?
Proteinaceous infections only
They are transmissible diseases that have no DNA or RNA
List some examples of prion diseases.
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
- Gerstmann-Straussler-Sheinker syndrome
- Kuru
- Fatal familial insomnia
Describe the histological appearance of brains affected by prion diseases.
- Spongiform change - tissue is full of vacuoles
- Prion protein deposits
Outline the pathophysiology of prion diseases.
- The normal PrPc protein will unfold and refold into a beta-pleated sheet form (PrPsc) which is more susceptible to aggregation
- Once a little bit forms (seed), it can propagate
- The accumulation of insoluble protein in the parenchyma leads to cell death
What are the key features of new variant CJD?
- Sporadic neuropsychiatric disorder
- Rapidly progessive course
- Mainly younger patients (<45 years)
- Associated with BSE
- Clinical features include cerebellar ataxia and dementia
- Diagnosed at autopsy
List and describe the main neuropathological features of Alzheimer’s disease.
- Extracellular plaques - extracellular accumulations of amyloid beta
- Neurofibrilliary tangles - intra-neuronal pathology caused by disruption of the intracellular cytoskeleton
- Cerebral amyloid angiopathy - deposits of protein in blood vessel walls which impairs normal vascular function
- Cerebral atrophy - supporting feature
Which part of the brain is often affected by cortical atrophy in Alzheimer’s disease?
Inferior horn of the lateral ventricles where the hippocampus is found - this is responsible for loss of short-term memory
Describe how amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing leads to the formation of beta-amyloid plaques.
- Non-amyloidogenic: involves cleavage of the amyloid-beta (A-beta) sequence
- Amyloidogenic: cleavage occurs at the amino-terminus of A-beta and a second cleavage leads to the production of A-beta
NOTE: the toxicity of A-beta is likely to be intracellular (extracellular plaques are unlikely to cause many issues themselves)
What is tau protein and how does it cause pathology?
- Microtubule-associated protein that is important for maintaining the stability of the cytoskeleton
- When it becomes hyperphosphorylated it accumulates inside cells and causes cell death
Describe the Braak stages of tau pathology in Alzheimer’s disease.
Neurofibrillary tangles (aggregates of phosphorylated tau)
Entorhinal
Stage 1: olfactory bulb and entorhinal cortex
Stage 2: hippocampus
Limbic
Stage 3: amygdala
Stage 4: temporal lobe
Neocortex
Stage 5: parietal lobe
Stage 6: frontal lobe
NOTE: clinically, symptoms tend to arise in stage 3 or 4
What type of disease is chronic traumatic encephalopathy?
Tauopathy
What is responsible for the dark colour of the substantia nigra?
Neuromelanin - this is a by-product of dopamine metabolism
On a cellular level, what causes Parkinson’s disease?
- Death of dopaminergic cells of the substantia nigra
- Cells from the substantia nigra usually project to the basal ganglia (which is important for the initiation of the movement)
Outline the main histological features of Parkinson’s disease.
- Lewy bodies - intracellular accumulations of alpha-synuclein
- Parkinson’s disease is caused by dysfunction metabolism of alpha-synuclein
NOTE: this was discovered because mutations in the alpha-synuclein gene are associated with rare familial forms of Parkinson’s disease
What is the diagnostic gold standard for Parkinson’s disease?
Alpha-synuclein immunostaining