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. 2014 May:65:193-201.
doi: 10.1016/j.nbd.2014.01.010. Epub 2014 Jan 28.

Ceramides and sphingomyelinases in senile plaques

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Ceramides and sphingomyelinases in senile plaques

Maï Panchal et al. Neurobiol Dis. 2014 May.

Abstract

The senile plaque is a hallmark lesion of Alzheimer disease (AD). We compared, without a priori, the lipidome of the senile plaques and of the adjacent plaque-free neuropil. The analysis by liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry revealed that laser microdissected senile plaques were enriched in saturated ceramides Cer(d18:1/18:0) and Cer(d18:1/20:0) by 33 and 78% respectively with respect to the surrounding neuropil. This accumulation of ceramides was not explained by their affinity for Aβ deposits: no interaction between ceramide-liposomes and Aβ fibrils was observed in vitro by surface plasmon resonance and fluorescent ceramide-liposomes showed no affinity for the senile plaques in AD brain tissue. Accumulation of ceramides could be, at least partially, the result of a local production by acid and neutral sphingomyelinases that we found to be present in the corona of the senile plaques.

Keywords: Alzheimer disease; Aβ peptide; Ceramides; Laser microdissection; Lipidomics; Lipids; Mass spectrometry; Senile plaques; Sphingomyelinase.

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