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Query: UNIPROT:P01034 (
cystatin C
)
3,397
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied the presence and morphology of plaque-like lesions in the frontal cortex of six patients, aged 40 to 76 years, with hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis--Dutch type (HCHWA-D), using beta/A4 immuno-, silver,
Congo red
and thioflavin S staining. Two types of beta/A4 immunoreactive and
Congo red
-negative plaques were detected. The first type was composed of argyrophilic fibrous material in periodic acid-methenamine silver (PAM) and modified Bielschowsky staining and lacked silver-stained degenerating neurites. Therefore, this type of plaque has the same staining properties as the diffuse plaque described in Alzheimer's disease, Down's syndrome and nondemented elderly. The second type of plaque, occurring only in the three oldest patients and numerically increasing with age, consisted of a spherical non-argyrophilic area of granular texture with a rim of PAM-positive material. The PAM-positive fibrous material of both types of plaques was mingled with coarser and compact, irregular-shaped argyrophilic structures in the oldest patient. The described plaques did not show bright fluorescence with thioflavin S staining. These results indicate, that the morphology of plaques, encountered in
HCHWA
-D, is diverse and changes with age.
...
PMID:Morphology of cerebral plaque-like lesions in hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis (Dutch). 147 74
Amyloidosis is a disease involving the fibrillar deposition of proteins in a manner that uniformly leads to the presence of green birefringence on polarization microscopy after staining the involved tissues with
Congo red
. In the year summarized, a wide range of new information has accumulated about this disease. In this article, attention has been paid to several newly described proteins now known to precipitate into amyloid deposits, including the proteins transthyretin, apolipoprotein A-1,
cystatin C
, gelsolin, amyloid beta protein, beta 2-microglobulin, scrapie protein, and islet amyloid polypeptide. The number of these amyloid-related proteins has resulted in the need for a revised nomenclature and classification scheme. The results of a recent international symposium addressing this issue are summarized in table form. The varied clinical manifestations of amyloidosis are described according to organ system, with unusual or unique areas of involvement noted. Finally, the treatment of amyloidosis and its prognosis are addressed, and new areas of possible intervention suggested.
...
PMID:Amyloidosis. 204 38
The clinical and neuropathologic findings in 11 cases with intracerebral hemorrhages related to
CAA
were reported. Their age ranged from 45 to 79 years, the average being 61.8 years. The hematomas were all in cerebral lobes, except two patients whose hematomas were in the basal ganglia and thalamus. These hematomas were in irregular shapes, ruptured into ventricles and/or subarachnoid space in all cases. The vessel's wall of arteries in the leptomeninges, superficial cortex and those adjacent to hemorrhagic foci showed considerable thickness. Hemorrhagic foci showed considerable thickness. Homogeneously eosinophilic structures deposited in these vessel's wall of several small arteries. Some of these vessels showed luminal stenosis.
Congo red
staining confirmed characteristic amyloid apple-green birefringence under polarizing microscope.
...
PMID:[Intracerebral hemorrhage related with cerebral amyloid angiopathy]. 209 45
A 49-year-old man suffered from progressive dementia and seizures leading to death after 2 years. CT scans showed severe cortical-subcortical atrophy and hypodensity of the white matter. His father had died at about the same age with similar clinical signs. Two sisters and one brother were also affected. Neuropathological study revealed predominant involvement of the cerebral white matter with myelin loss, gliosis and type I lacunes. The small arteries and arterioles of the white matter and basal ganglia, and, to a lesser extent those of the subarachnoidal space, displayed fibrosis and replacement of the media by an eosinophilic, PAS positive,
Congo Red
negative, granular substance. Electron microscopy showed swollen myocytes surrounded by collagen, elastin and a compact electron-dense material. Immunofluorescence using antibodies against IgA, IgG, IgM, C1q and C3 stained the abnormal media weakly. In the cortex, there were diffuse senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated beta/A4 positive material in cortical senile plaques but not in arterial walls. Adventitial macrophages were, however, immunoreactive for
gamma-trace
. Systemic arterioles were normal. The vascular changes and leukoencephalopathy are comparable to those described in 'Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy' (CADASIL). Similar vascular changes were also observed in nonfamilial cases. An association with Alzheimer changes in the cortex has not been described previously. The relationship between both diseases and the role of each in the causation of the dementia is unclear.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant arteriopathic leuko-encephalopathy and Alzheimer's disease. 820 37
Two forms of abnormal fibrillary protein deposition are considered: amyloidosis and fibrillary (immunotactoid) glomerulonephritis. Amyloid is characterised by an antiparallel, beta-pleated configuration which imparts to it a unique apple-green birefringence after
Congo red
staining. Inspite of its fairly constant physical properties, the chemical composition of amyloid fibrils is amazingly diverse, encomposing AA protein, light chain fragments, transthyretin, procalcitonin, islet amyloid polypeptide, atrial natriuretic peptides, beta-amyloid protein, beta-2-microglobulin,
cystatin C
, gelsolin, apolipoprotein A1, lyzozyme and their mutant variants. Amyloid P component and heparan sulphate proteoglycan are ubiquitous non-fibrillary amyloid components which have significant roles in the amyloidogenetic process, as do also precursor fibril proteins. Different amyloid fibril proteins relate to different amyloidosis syndromes and different histological patterns, and provide the basis for new diagnostic approaches to this disorder. Glomerular deposits in fibrillary glomerulonephritis (FGN), although often mistaken for amyloid, differ from it in its negative Congophilia, wider fibril width and highly organised, microtubular-tactoidal appearance ultrastructurally. FGN is essentially a primary glomerulopathy resulting in progressive renal failure. Despite certain differences, intriguing similarities between both entities of fibrillary deposition pose a challenge to researchers as to the mechanisms of abnormal protein crystallization and fibril formation in tissues.
...
PMID:Fibrillary deposits: amyloids and tactoids. 890 98
In hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis, Dutch type (HCHWA-D), a genetic variant (E22Q) of amyloid beta (Abeta) accumulates predominantly in the small vessels of leptomeninges and cerebral cortex, leading to fatal strokes in the fifth or sixth decade of life. Abeta deposition in the neuropil occurs mainly in the form of preamyloid,
Congo red
negative deposits, while mature neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles, hallmark lesions in Alzheimer's disease (AD), are characteristically absent. A recent hypothesis regarding the pathogenesis of AD states that Abeta extending to residues 42-43 (as opposed to shorter species) can seed amyloid formation and trigger the development of neuritic plaques followed by neuronal damage in AD. We characterized biochemically and immunohistochemically Abeta from three cases of
HCHWA
-D to determine its length in vascular and parenchymal deposits. Mass spectrometry of formic acid-soluble amyloid, purified by size-exclusion gel chromatography, showed that Abeta 1-40 and its carboxyl-terminal truncated derivatives were the predominant forms in leptomeningeal and cortical vessels. Abeta 1-42 was a minor component in these amyloid extracts. Immunohistochemistry with antibodies S40 and S42, specific for Abeta ending at Val-40 or Ala-42, respectively, were consistent with the biochemical data from vascular amyloid. In addition, parenchymal preamyloid lesions were specifically stained with S42 and were not labeled by S40, in agreement with the pattern reported for AD, Down's syndrome, and aged dogs. Our results suggest that in
HCHWA
-D the carboxyl-terminal Abeta heterogeneity is due to limited proteolysis in vivo. Moreover, they suggest that Abeta species ending at Ala-42 may not be critical for the seeding of amyloid formation and the development of AD-like neuritic changes.
...
PMID:The length of amyloid-beta in hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis, Dutch type. Implications for the role of amyloid-beta 1-42 in Alzheimer's disease. 894 74
Amyloid beta protein (A beta) deposition in the cerebral arterial and capillary walls is one of the major characteristics of brains from patients with Alzheimer's disease and hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis-Dutch type (HCHWA-D). Vascular A beta deposition is accompanied by degeneration of smooth muscle cells and pericytes. In this study we found that A beta 1-40 carrying the "Dutch" mutation (HCHWA-D A beta 1-40) as well as wild-type A beta 1-42 induced degeneration of cultured human brain pericytes and human leptomeningeal smooth muscle cells, whereas wild-type A beta 1-40 and
HCHWA
-D A beta 1-42 were inactive. Cultured brain pericytes appeared to be much more vulnerable to A beta-induced degeneration than leptomeningeal smooth muscle cells, because in brain pericyte cultures cell viability already decreased after 2 days of exposure to
HCHWA
-D A beta 1-40, whereas in leptomeningeal smooth muscle cell cultures cell death was prominent only after 4-5 days. Moreover, leptomeningeal smooth muscle cell cultures were better able to recover than brain pericyte cultures after short-term treatment with
HCHWA
-D A beta 1-40. Degeneration of either cell type was preceded by an increased production of cellular amyloid precursor protein. Both cell death and amyloid precursor protein production could be inhibited by the amyloid-binding dye
Congo red
, suggesting that fibril assembly of A beta is crucial for initiating its destructive effects. These data imply an important role for A beta in inducing perivascular cell pathology as observed in the cerebral vasculature of patients with Alzheimer's disease or
HCHWA
-D.
...
PMID:Rapid degeneration of cultured human brain pericytes by amyloid beta protein. 904 59
To better understand the characteristics of amyloid deposition in the choroid plexus, we examined autopsied brain by routine histology, immunohistochemistry, and electron microscopy in three group of patients: primary systemic amyloidosis (n = 7), cerebral amyloid angiopathy (
CAA
, n = 6), and controls (n = 3). Three of the
CAA
patients had Alzheimer's disease. Congophilic, birefringent amyloid deposits of the choroid plexus were seen in six of the seven cases of systemic light chain amyloidosis. Immunohistochemistry revealed that the deposited amyloids had reactivity for immunoglobulin light chain and amyloid P component. Accumulation of macrophages labeled with monoclonal antibodies against CD 68 and major histocompatibility complex class II antigens were observed around the massive amyloid deposits. The presence of approximately 10 nm amyloid fibrils along the epithelial basement membrane as well as in the vascular walls was ascertained by electron microscopy. In
CAA
,
Congo red
-positive amyloid deposits were consistently present in meningeal blood vessels and were often found in senile plaques of the cerebral parenchyma; congophilic amyloid deposits were absent in the choroid plexus. Choroid plexus epithelial cells exhibited immunostaining for beta amyloid precursor protein (APP) with N-terminal- and C-terminal-specific antibodies; in particular, consistent staining was obtained for the latter antibody. Immunoreactivity for amyloid beta protein (A beta) with monoclonal antibodies (6E10, 4G8) was often found in choroid plexus epithelial cells. These findings suggest that amyloid deposition of the choroid plexus depends on the major component protein in amyloidosis, and that the choroid plexus may produce APP and A beta protein although A beta amyloidosis is not evident in the choroid plexus.
...
PMID:Human choroid plexus is an uniquely involved area of the brain in amyloidosis: a histochemical, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study. 917 87
Cerebrovascular amyloid beta-protein (A beta) deposition is a key pathological feature of Alzheimer's disease and hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis-Dutch type (HCHWA-D). A beta(1-40) containing the E22Q
HCHWA
-D mutation, but not wild-type A beta(1-40), potently induces several pathologic responses in cultured human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells, including cellular degeneration and a robust increase in the levels of cellular A beta precursor. In the present study, we show by several quantitative criteria, including thioflavin T fluorescence binding, circular dichroism spectroscopy, and transmission electron microscopic analysis, that at a concentration of 25 microM neither
HCHWA
-D A beta(1-40) nor wild-type A beta(1-40) appreciably assembles into beta-pleated sheet-containing fibrils in solution over a 6-day incubation period. In contrast, at the same concentrations,
HCHWA
-D A beta(1-40), but not wild-type A beta(1-40), selectively binds and assembles into abundant fibrils on the surfaces of cultured human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells. The simultaneous addition of an equimolar concentration of the dye
Congo red
prevents the cell surface fibril assembly of
HCHWA
-D A beta(1-40). Moreover,
Congo red
effectively blocks the key pathologic responses induced by
HCHWA
-D A beta(1-40) in these cells. The present findings suggest that the surface of human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells may selectively orchestrate the assembly of pathogenic A beta fibrils and that cell surface A beta fibril formation plays an important role in causing the pathologic responses in these cells.
...
PMID:Pathologic amyloid beta-protein cell surface fibril assembly on cultured human cerebrovascular smooth muscle cells. 942 65
The matrix-degrading activity of several proteases are involved in the accelerated breakdown of extracellular matrix associated with vascular remodeling during the development of atherosclerosis and vascular injury-induced neointimal formation. Previous studies have shown that the potent elastolytic cysteine proteases, cathepsins S and K, are overexpressed in atherosclerotic lesions in human and animal models. However, the role of these cathepsins in vascular remodeling remains unclear. In the present study, the expressions of cathepsin S and K and their inhibitor
cystatin C
were examined during arterial remodeling using a rat carotid artery balloon-injury model. The increase in both cathepsin S and K mRNA levels was observed from day 1 and day 3 through day 14 following the induction of balloon injury, respectively. Western blotting analysis revealed that both cathepsin S and K protein levels also increased in the carotid arteries during neointima formation, coinciding with an increase elastolytic activity assayed using Elastin-
Congo red
, whereas, no significant change in the expressions of
cystatin C
mRNA and protein was observed during follow-up periods after injury. Immunohistochemistry, Western blot, and in situ hybridization showed that the increase of cathepins S and K and the decrease of
cystatin C
occurred preferentially in the developing neointima. These findings suggest that cathepsin S and K may participate in the pathological arterial remodeling associated with restenosis.
...
PMID:Increased expression of elastolytic cysteine proteases, cathepsins S and K, in the neointima of balloon-injured rat carotid arteries. 1469 37
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