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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (
myositis
)
4,538
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 11 of 11 inclusion-body
myositis
(IBM) patients, including one hereditary case, vacuolated muscle fibers contained large and multiple small inclusions immunoreactive for
beta-amyloid protein
(beta AP). All IBM muscle biopsies had characteristic cytoplasmic tubulo-filaments (CTFs) by electron microscopy. None of 14 control muscle biopsies contained the beta AP immunoreactive (IR) inclusions characteristic of IBM. On the light microscopy level, beta AP-IR inclusions colocalized with ubiquitin immunoreactivity. By immunogold electronmicroscopy, beta AP immunoreactivity was localized to a) amorphous, poorly defined structures, b) dense floccular material, c) clusters of loosely packed amyloidlike fibrils 6-8 nm in diameter, and d) poorly defined loose fibrillar structures 6-8 nm in diameter. beta AP immunoreactive structures were often in proximity to CTFs, but CTFs themselves never contained beta AP-IR. Our study provides the first demonstration of beta AP accumulations in abnormal human muscle. This finding suggests that in addition to Alzheimer's disease, Down syndrome, and Dutch-type hereditary cerebrovascular amyloidosis, beta AP may play an important role in the pathogenesis of other diseases, including ones outside the central nervous system, for example, IBM.
...
PMID:Light and electron microscopic localization of beta-amyloid protein in muscle biopsies of patients with inclusion-body myositis. 132 64
In this review, the main emphasis is on new advances concerning sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and hereditary inclusion-body myopathy. Polymyositis and dermatomyositis are reviewed briefly. Hypotheses are presented regarding the possible cause and significance of abnormally accumulated
beta-amyloid protein
, two other epitopes of beta-
amyloid precursor protein
, hyperphosphorylated tau, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, ubiquitin, and prion protein in sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and hereditary inclusion-body myopathy. Because most of those proteins are also accumulated at the neuromuscular junction, "junctionalization" of other muscle fiber nuclei is a possibility. Attention is given to the fact that vacuolated muscle fibers in hereditary inclusion-body myopathy may represent early changes because they are virtually free of congophilic amyloid deposit but, like sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
, contain large accumulations of
beta-amyloid protein
and prion.
...
PMID:Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: inclusion-body myositis, polymyositis, and dermatomyositis. 780 66
Sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
is the most common progressive muscle disease of older patients. The muscle biopsy demonstrates mononuclear cell inflammation and vacuolated muscle fibers containing paired helical filaments and 6 to 10-nm fibrils, both resembling those of Alzheimer brain, and Congo-red positivity. Hereditary inclusion-body myopathy designates patients cytopathologically similar but without inflammation. In both muscle diseases, prion, and several proteins characteristic of Alzheimer brain--eg,
beta-amyloid protein
and hyperphosphorylated tau (which normally are expressed mainly in neurons), and apolipoprotein E--are abnormally accumulated in vacuolated muscle fibers, by unknown mechanisms. We now demonstrate in both muscle diseases that prion mRNA is strongly expressed in the vacuolated muscle fibers, which suggests that their accumulated prion protein results, at least partly, from increased gene expression. This, to our knowledge, is the first demonstration of abnormally increased prion mRNA in human disease. Another novel finding is the increased prion mRNA in human muscle macrophages, and both increased prion protein and prion mRNA in regenerating muscle fibers. The latter indicates that prion may play a role in human muscle development.
...
PMID:Abnormal accumulation of prion protein mRNA in muscle fibers of patients with sporadic inclusion-body myositis and hereditary inclusion-body myopathy. 799 30
The major new advances in seeking the pathogenic mechanisms of sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and hereditary inclusion-body myopathy are discussed. Hypotheses are presented regarding the possible causes and significance of amyloid deposits in sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and the roles of abnormally accumulated ubiquitin,
beta-amyloid protein
, beta-
amyloid precursor protein
, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, hyperphosphorylated tau, and prion protein in the vacuolated muscle fibers in both sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and hereditary inclusion-body myopathy. Because hereditary inclusion-body myopathy is virtually free of Congophilic amyloid deposits but, like sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
, contains large accumulations of
beta-amyloid protein
, it is possible that the lesions in hereditary inclusion-body myopathy may represent "early" changes. There are striking similarities between the pathology of inclusion-body
myositis
muscle and brains affected by Alzheimer's disease in regard to accumulation of ubiquitin,
beta-amyloid protein
and its precursor protein, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and hyperphosphorylated tau.
...
PMID:New advances in inclusion-body myositis. 811 35
In muscle biopsies of 8 sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
(S-IBM) and 4 hereditary inclusion-body myopathy (H-IBM) patients, vacuolated muscle fibers contained within their vacuoles strongly immunoreactive inclusions with 2 polyclonal and 1 monoclonal antibodies against prion protein (PrP). By light-microscopy, PrP deposits co-localized with
beta-amyloid protein
(A beta) and ubiquitin (Ub). By immuno-electronmicroscopy, both PrP and A beta were present on amorphous material and on 6-10 nm amyloid-like fibrils; and PrP and Ub co-localized on cytoplasmic twisted tubulofilaments (TTFs) and on amorphous material. Our study provides the first demonstration of abnormally accumulated PrP in pathological tissue other than brain, and it suggests that PrP may play a role in the pathogenesis of IBM.
...
PMID:Prion protein is abnormally accumulated in inclusion-body myositis. 828 Aug 54
In 10 of 10 inclusion-body
myositis
(IBM) patients, including 1 hereditary case, vacuolated muscle fibers contained large or small cytoplasmic inclusions immunoreactive for alpha 1-antichymotrypsin (alpha 1-ACT). All IBM muscle biopsies had characteristic cytoplasmic tubulo-filaments by electron microscopy. None of 17 control muscle biopsies contained the alpha 1-ACT immunoreactive inclusions characteristic of IBM. In vacuolated muscle fibers, alpha 1-ACT immunoreactive inclusions colocalized with
beta-amyloid protein
and ubiquitin immunoreactivities. Our study provides the first demonstration of alpha 1-ACT accumulations in abnormal human muscle, and it suggest that, as in Alzheimer's disease and Down's syndrome, alpha 1-ACT may be involved in the pathogenesis of IBM.
...
PMID:Strong immunoreactivity of alpha 1-antichymotrypsin co-localizes with beta-amyloid protein and ubiquitin in vacuolated muscle fibers of inclusion-body myositis. 838 97
As in Alzheimer-disease (AD) brain, vacuolated muscle fibers of inclusion-body
myositis
(IBM) contain abnormally accumulated beta-
amyloid precursor protein
(
beta APP
), including its
beta-amyloid protein
epitope, and increased
beta APP
-751 mRNA. Other similarities between IBM muscle and AD brain phenotypes include paired helical filaments, hyperphosphorylated tau protein, apolipoprotein E, and mitochondrial abnormalities, including decreased cytochrome-c oxidase (COX) activity. The pathogenesis of these abnormalities in IBM muscle and AD brain is not known. We now report that direct transfer of the
beta APP
gene, using adenovirus vector, into cultured normal human muscle fibers causes structural abnormalities of mitochondria and decreased COX activity. In this adenovirus-mediated
beta APP
gene transfer, we demonstrated that
beta APP
overproduction can induce mitochondrial abnormalities. The data suggest that excessive
beta APP
may be responsible for mitochondrial and COX abnormalities in IBM muscle and perhaps AD brain.
...
PMID:Transfer of beta-amyloid precursor protein gene using adenovirus vector causes mitochondrial abnormalities in cultured normal human muscle. 857 61
This review emphasizes new advances in seeking the pathogenic mechanisms of sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and hereditary inclusion-body myopathy syndromes. Clinical and pathologic similarities and differences between sporadic and hereditary forms are described. Hypotheses are presented regarding the possible causes and consequences of abnormally accumulated intramyofiber beta-
amyloid precursor protein
(
beta APP
) (including
beta-amyloid protein
and C- and N-terminal epitopes), hyperphosphorylated tau, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, apolipoprotein E, prion protein, ubiquitin, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor and its 43-kD associated protein, fibroblast growth factor, and transforming growth factor-beta. Also increased are
beta APP
mRNA and prion protein mRNA. Striking similarities between the pathology of muscle specimens from sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
and samples from the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease in regard to Congo red positivity and accumulations of several proteins are discussed. Because most of the proteins that pathologically accumulate throughout the abnormal muscle fibers also accumulate focally at normal human neuromuscular junctions, the possible "junctionalization" of nonjunctional nuclei as a pathogenic mechanism in the muscle fiber is discussed.
...
PMID:New advances in the understanding of sporadic inclusion-body myositis and hereditary inclusion-body myopathies. 857 68
Direct transfer of the beta-
amyloid precursor protein
(
beta APP
) gene into cultured normal human muscle, using recombinant adenovirus vector, was sufficient to induce several of the typical light microscopic, electron microscopic (EM), and EM-immunochemical aspects of the inclusion-body
myositis
(IBM) phenotype, including congophilia, clusters of amyloid-beta-positive 6-10 nm filaments, and 15-21 nm tubulofilamentous inclusions in the nuclei. Our results suggest that excessive production of intracellular
beta APP
may play an important role in the pathogenic cascade leading to the IBM phenotype.
...
PMID:Beta APP gene transfer into cultured human muscle induces inclusion-body myositis aspects. 924 2
Sporadic inclusion-body
myositis
(s-IBM) is the most common progressive muscle disease of older persons. The muscle biopsy demonstrates mononuclear cell inflammation and vacuolated muscle fibers containing paired helical filaments and 6- to 10-nm fibrils, both resembling those of
Alzheimer disease
brain and Congo red positivity. The term hereditary inclusion-body myopathies (h-IBMs) designates autosomal-recessive or autosomal-dominant disorders with muscle biopsies cytopathologically similar to s-IBM but without inflammation. Vacuolated muscle fibers of both s-IBM and the h-IBMs contain accumulations of several "Alzheimer-characteristic proteins" including
beta-amyloid protein
and beta-
amyloid precursor protein
, and their paired helical filaments are composed of phosphorylated tau. We used six well characterized antibodies against several residues of presenilin 1 (PS1) to immunostain muscle biopsies of 12 patients with s-IBM, 5 patients with autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myopathy, and 16 normal and disease controls. Seventy to eighty percent of the vacuolated muscle fibers of both s-IBM and autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myopathy had inclusions that were strongly PS1-immunoreactive, which by immunoelectron microscopy localized mainly to paired helical filaments and 6- to 10-nm filaments. None of the control biopsies had PS1-positive inclusions characteristic of the s- and h-IBM abnormal muscle fibers. Mutations of the newly discovered PS1 gene are responsible for early-onset familial Alzheimer disease (AD), and PS1 is abnormally accumulated in sporadic and familial AD brain. Our study provides the first demonstration of PS1 abnormality in non-neural tissue and in diseases other than AD and suggests that the cytopathogenesis in AD brain and IBM muscle may share similarities.
...
PMID:Light and electron microscopic immunolocalization of presenilin 1 in abnormal muscle fibers of patients with sporadic inclusion-body myositis and autosomal-recessive inclusion-body myopathy. 954 49
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