Intracranial administration of deglycosylated C-terminal-specific anti-Abeta antibody efficiently clears amyloid plaques without activating microglia in amyloid-depositing transgenic mice. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Antibodies against the Ass peptide clear Ass deposits when injected intracranially. Deglycosylated antibodies have reduced effector functions compared to their intact counterparts, potentially avoiding immune activation. METHODS: Deglycosylated or intact C-terminal specific high affinity anti-Abeta antibody (2H6) were intracranially injected into the right frontal cortex and hippocampus of amyloid precursor protein (APP) transgenic mice. The untreated left hemisphere was used to normalize for the extent of amyloid deposition present in each mouse. Control transgenic mice were injected with an antibody against a drosophila-specific protein (amnesiac). Tissues were examined for brain amyloid deposition and microglial responses 3 days after the injection. RESULTS: The deglycosylated 2H6 antibody had lower affinity for several murine Fcgamma receptors and human complement than intact 2H6 without a change in affinity for Ass. Immunohistochemistry for Abeta and thioflavine-S staining revealed that both diffuse and compact deposits were reduced by both antibodies. In animals treated with the intact 2H6 antibody, a significant increase in Fcgamma-receptor II/III immunostaining was observed compared to animals treated with the control IgG antibody. No increase in Fcgamma-receptor II/III was found with the deglycosylated 2H6 antibody. Immunostaining for the microglial activation marker CD45 demonstrated a similar trend. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that the deglycosylated 2H6 is capable of removing both compact and diffuse plaques without activating microglia. Thus, antibodies with reduced effector functions may clear amyloid without concomitant immune activation when tested as immunotherapy for Alzheimer's disease.

publication date

  • May 10, 2006

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC1479322

PubMed ID

  • 16686956

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 3