0000000000681239
AUTHOR
Robert G. Struble
Cellular Distribution and Expression of Cortical Acetylcholine Receptors in Aging and Alzheimer's Disease
Ligand binding studies show marked reductions of nicotinic, but not of muscarinic binding sites in Alzheimer's disease. Using monoclonal antibodies we studied immunohistochemically the expression of the respective receptor proteins in the frontal cortex of middle-aged (55 +/- 5 yr) controls, age-matched controls (73 +/- 6 yr), and patients with Alzheimer's disease (74 +/- 5 yr). Density of nicotinic cholinoceptive neurons was 8000/mm3 for middle-aged controls and 4000/mm3 for age-matched controls, but only 900/mm3 in Alzheimer's brains (p less than 0.0001). Densities of muscarinic cholinoceptive and of Nissl-stained neurons were not significantly different between the groups, pointing to a …
Nicotinic cholinoceptive neurons of the frontal cortex are reduced in Alzheimer's disease.
The cellular distribution of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors was studied in the frontal cortex (area 10) of 1) Alzheimer patients and compared to 2) age-matched and 3) middle-aged controls using the monoclonal antibody WF 6 and an immunoperoxidase protocol. Statistical analysis revealed significant differences between the number of labeled neurons among all three groups tested (middle-aged controls greater than aged controls greater than Alzheimer cases). No differences were seen for cresyl violet-stained samples. These findings underline that the nicotinic receptor decrease found with radioligand binding may reflect a postsynaptic in addition to a presynaptic component.