The major protein constituent of Lewy bodies (LBs), the pathological hallmark of Parkinson disease and dementia with Lewy bodies, is considered to be alpha-synuclein, but other proteins, in particular the microtubule-associated protein tau, have been implicated in the pathogenesis of LBs. Tau is the major structural component of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs). Both direct immunochemical studies of partially purified LBs and indirect immunohistochemical studies have suggested that LBs may contain tau, but most of these studies were based upon a single tau antibody, and immunologic cross-reactivity was not completely excluded. To gain insight into the relation between tau and alpha-synuclein in LBs, double immunostaining was performed in Lewy body cases with a rabbit polyclonal antibody to alpha-synuclein and a panel of monoclonal antibodies to phospho- and nonphospho-tau epitopes (Alz50, CP9, CP13, PG5, TG3, PHFI) that spanned the length of the tau molecule. Tau-immunoreactive LBs were present in the medulla in 80% of the cases, irrespective of Braak stage. All tau antibodies recognized at least some LBs, arguing against nonspecific antibody cross-reactivity. In most lesions the tau immunostaining was present at the periphery of the LB. The phospho-tau antibody, TG3, detected more LBs than any of the other tau antibodies. The proportion of LBs with tau immunoreactivity was greatest in neurons vulnerable to NETs, such as those in the locus ceruleus and basal nucleus of Meynert, and least in neurons resistant to NFTs, such as the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus in the medulla. The present results suggest that tau may coaggregate with alpha-synuclein in LBs, especially in neuronal populations vulnerable to both NFTs and LBs.
Amygdala, hippocampus and six cortical gyri were examined for the Lewy body (LB) degeneration and Alzheimer's disease (AD) type changes in 45 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). For detection of LBs, the brain areas were stained with an antibody against alpha-synuclein. The extent of neuropathological lesions was investigated in relation to cognitive dysfunction and apolipoprotein E (apoE) epsilon4 allele dosage. At least one cortical LB was found in 95% of cases (43/45). Furthermore, 40% of cases (18/45) had histological findings of definite AD (CERAD class C). Those PD cases with the apoE epsilon4 allele had a significantly greater number of cortical LBs than those without the apoE epsilon4 allele, but this was statistically significant only in precentral, angular and temporal gyri. The LB density correlated better with the number of plaques than with the density of tangles. The number of LBs in several cortical areas correlated significantly with the cognitive impairment. In stepwise linear regression analysis, the number of LBs in the cingulate gyrus and the amount of tangles in the temporal cortex remained statistically significant. When the CERAD class C was excluded, the correlation between cognitive decline and the number of LBs in cortical areas became even more pronounced. A stepwise linear regression analysis in these cases found the number of LBs in the frontal gyrus to be the statistically most significant predictor of cognitive impairment. This study shows, for the first time, that in PD, alpha-synuclein-positive cortical LBs are associated with cognitive impairment independent of AD-type pathology.
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