Abstrakt: |
Abstract Cystatin C (CC), an endogenous cysteine protease inhibitor, is accumulated within amyloid-β (Aβ) amyloid deposits in Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain and was proposed to play a role in the AD pathogenesis. Because the chemo-morphologic muscle phenotype of sporadic inclusion-body myositis (s-IBM) has several similarities with the phenotype of AD brain, including abnormal accumulation of Aβ deposits, we studied expression and localization of CC in muscle biopsies of 10 s-IBM, and 16 disease- and five normal-control muscle biopsies. Physical interaction of CC with amyloid-β precursor protein (AβPP) was studied by a combined immunoprecipitation/immunoblotting technique in the s-IBM muscle biopsies and in AβPP-overexpressing cultured human muscle fibers. In all s-IBM muscle biopsies, CC-immunoreactivity either colocalized with, or was adjacent to, the Aβ-immunoreactive inclusions in 80–90% of the vacuolated muscle fibers, mostly in non-vacuolated regions of their cytoplasm. Ultrastructurally, CC immunoreactivity-colocalized with Aβ on 6–10 nm amyloid-like fibrils and floccular material. By immunoblotting, CC expression was strongly increased in IBM muscle as compared to the controls. By immunoprecipitation/immunoblotting experiments, CC coimmunoprecipitated with AβPP, both in s-IBM muscle and in AβPP-overexpressing cultured normal human muscle fibers. Our studies (i) demonstrate for the first time that CC physically associates with AβPP, and (ii) suggest that CC may play a novel role in the s-IBM pathogenesis, possibly by influencing AβPP processing and Aβ deposition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |