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. 1992 Jul;141(1):31-6.

Light and electron microscopic localization of beta-amyloid protein in muscle biopsies of patients with inclusion-body myositis

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Light and electron microscopic localization of beta-amyloid protein in muscle biopsies of patients with inclusion-body myositis

V Askanas et al. Am J Pathol. 1992 Jul.

Abstract

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.

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