Sofia Nyström’s research while affiliated with Linköping University and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (6)


AA-Amyloid is cleared by endogenous immunological mechanisms
  • Article

September 2012

·

33 Reads

·

33 Citations

Sofia N Nyström

·

AA amyloidosis is a complication to longstanding inflammatory diseases, but reduction of amyloid mass has been reported as the inflammation ceases. Not much is known about the endogenous factors that contribute to this amyloid resolution. Herein, we describe the dynamics of amyloid degradation and resolution in experimental murine AA-amyloidosis. AA-amyloidosis was induced in mice with injections of amyloid enhancing factor (AEF) and by inflammation induced with injections of silver nitrate. Resolution of amyloid deposits was monitored over time. Virtually all amyloid was cleared within 34 weeks. Using the ELISA-technique, antibodies directed against protein AA were detected in animals during amyloid clearance phase and macrophages were shown to internalize amyloid. Also, passive immunization with an amyloid specific monoclonal antibody, produced by a B-cell clone recovered from an animal with advanced AA-amyloidosis, reduced amyloid development in murine AA-amyloidosis. Immunoglobulins co-localize with amyloid deposits and can contribute to amyloid degradation by Fc-receptor mediated phagocytosis, and should be considered key players in the degradation process.


Table 3 . Analysis of AEF activity in peripheral blood monocytes isolated from mice with AA amyloidosis.
(A) The amyloid appears pink and is localized to the perifollicular zone. (B) The identical area exhibits green birefringence in polarized light. Amyloid is indicated by arrows.
(A) Flow cytometry analysis of isolated and cultured fraction of peripheral blood monocytic cells (PBMC). The measurements were performed using forward scatter versus side scatter and 10,000 events were recorded. The marked area represents monocytic population and four independent isolations were analyzed. The monocyte population was determined to 64%±15% (mean±SD). Insert shows analysis of PBMC prior to culture. (B) Representative picture of a cell recovered after isolation and culture. Bar 1 uM.
There was no reactivity present in monocytes recovered from a mouse given one AgNO3 injection 48 hrs prior to isolation (B) or in monocytes isolated from untreated mice (C). The used rabbit antiserum recognizes both protein AA and SAA and was visualized by goat anti rabbit Alexa488-cojugated IgG. Cell nuclei were labeled with TO-PRO3. Bar 10 um.
Cells were isolated from mice that developed AA-amyloid after AEF and AgNO3 injections or from mice that received AEF or AgNO3 injections only or from untreated mice. Expression of the amyloid-prone SAA 1 or non-amyloidogenic SAA 2 was absent in all monocyte preparations. SAA 3 mRNA was detected in all cells independent of treatment. Mouse liver cDNA was used as a positive control. The PCR products were separated on a 1.6% agarose gel.
AA-Amyloidosis Can Be Transferred by Peripheral Blood Monocytes
  • Article
  • Full-text available

February 2008

·

96 Reads

·

56 Citations

Spongiform encephalopathies have been reported to be transmitted by blood transfusion even prior to the clinical onset. Experimental AA-amyloidosis shows similarities with prion disease and amyloid-containing organ-extracts can prime a recipient for the disease. In this systemic form of amyloidosis N-terminal fragments of the acute-phase reactant apolipoprotein serum amyloid A are the main amyloid protein. Initial amyloid deposits appear in the perifollicular region of the spleen, followed by deposits in the liver. We used the established murine model and induced AA-amyloidosis in NMRI mice by intravenous injections of purified amyloid fibrils ('amyloid enhancing factor') combined with inflammatory challenge (silver nitrate subcutaneously). Blood plasma and peripheral blood monocytes were isolated, sonicated and re-injected into new recipients followed by an inflammatory challenge during a three week period. When the animals were sacrificed presence of amyloid was analyzed in spleen sections after Congo red staining. Our result shows that some of the peripheral blood monocytes, isolated from animals with detectable amyloid, contained amyloid-seed that primed for AA-amyloid. The seeding material seems to have been phagocytosed by the cells since the AA-precursor (SAA1) was found not be expressed by the monocytes. Plasma recovered from mice with AA amyloidosis lacked seeding capacity. Amyloid enhancing activity can reside in monocytes recovered from mice with AA-amyloidosis and in a prion-like way trigger amyloid formation in conjunction with an inflammatory disorder. Human AA-amyloidosis resembles the murine form and every individual is expected to be exposed to conditions that initiate production of the acute-phase reactant. The monocyte-transfer mechanism should be eligible for the human disease and we point out blood transfusion as a putative route for transfer of amyloidosis.

Download




Fig. 1. Typical examples of different degrees of splenic amyloid deposits stained with Congo red dye. Amyloid appears as orange material when studied without polarized light ( a and c – e ) and exhibits green birefringence when studied with polarized light ( b and f ). 1 ϩ , Very thin focal deposits at follicles, almost undetectable when studied without polarized light ( a and b ). 2 ϩ , More pronounced perifollicular amyloid deposits in limited areas of the spleen ( c ). 3 ϩ , Moderate amyloid deposits around most or all follicles ( d ). 4 ϩ , Extensive amyloid deposits localized around follicles but often forming continuous in fi ltration ( e and f ). ( ϫ 100.) 
Fig. 2. Insulin enhances cAMP generation in response to isoproterenol in desensitized cells. ( A ) 3T3-L1 adipocytes were incubated at 37°C in serum-free media with (dashed lines) or without (solid lines) 100 ng ͞ ml insulin for 8 h. After this, cells were treated with 10 ␮ M isoproterenol for 5 min at 37°C. Cells were then washed with PBS at 37°C and restimulated with a second 10 ␮ M dose of isoproterenol for an additional 5 min at 37°C; intracellular cAMP was determined by enzyme immunoassay. ( B ) 3T3-L1 adipocytes were incubated at 37°C in serum-free media for 8 h in the presence (dashed lines) or absence (solid lines) of 100 ng ͞ ml insulin. Forskolin was added for the final 5 min, and intracellular cAMP levels were determined by enzyme-linked immunoassay. Data are from typical experiments done in triplicate wells and are representative of three separate experiments. 
Fig. 3. Elution pattern of AEF when run through a reversed-phase HPLC column. As indicated, the retarded peaks where identi fi ed as amyloid protein AA with N-terminal amino acid sequences identical to mouse SAA1. 
Transmissibility of systemic amyloidosis by a prion-like mechanism

June 2002

·

130 Reads

·

270 Citations

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

The generation of amyloid fibrils from an amyloidogenic polypeptide occurs by a nucleation-dependent process initiated in vitro by seeding the protein solution with preformed fibrils. This phenomenon is evidenced in vivo by the fact that amyloid protein A (AA) amyloidosis in mice is markedly accelerated when the animals are given, in addition to an inflammatory stimulus, an i.v. injection of protein extracted from AA amyloid-laden mouse tissue. Heretofore, the chemical nature of this "amyloid enhancing factor" (AEF) has not been definitively identified. Here we report that the active principle of AEF extracted from the spleen of mice with silver nitrate-induced AA amyloidosis was identified unequivocally as the AA fibril itself. Further, we demonstrated that this material was extremely potent, being active in doses <1 ng, and that it retained its biologic activity over a considerable length of time. Notably, the AEF was also effective when administered orally. Our studies have provided evidence that AA and perhaps other forms of amyloidosis are transmissible diseases, akin to the prion-associated disorders.

Citations (3)


... The anti-human SAA monoclonal mouse antibody Sne5 has been characterized earlier 22 . This antibody is directed against an epitope in the N-terminal part of SAA1 23 . Rabbit antiserum 126 was raised against a synthetic peptide MREANYIGSDK, corresponding to SAA1 positions 24-34 while rabbit antiserum 144 was raised against a synthetic peptide DPNHFRPAGLPEKY which corresponds to the C-terminal end of SAA1 (SAA91-104). ...

Reference:

The question of strains in AA amyloidosis
AA-Amyloid is cleared by endogenous immunological mechanisms
  • Citing Article
  • September 2012

... Experiments based on the single or multiple administrations of human splenic homogenates, human insulin amyloid fibrils, mouse liver or spleen tissues, or bovine amyloid fibrils, resulted in AA amyloidosis in mice [101,[105][106][107][108]. Amyloid fibrils within the enhancing factors could act with a seeding nucleation mechanism for fibrillogenesis, similarly to prion-associated diseases [109][110][111][112][113][114]. AEF activity has also been identified in peripheral blood monocytes recovered from mice with AA amyloidosis, seemingly able to cause AA amyloidosis after injection in recipient mice, likely due to phagocytosis of amyloid with retained seeding activity [115]. ...

AA-Amyloidosis Can Be Transferred by Peripheral Blood Monocytes

... This transmission can occur over very long distances in the body: in one subtype of Parkinson's Disease, known as "body-first" (Borghammer et al., 2021;Borghammer and Van Den Berge, 2019), α-syn aggregates start to accumulate in the enteric neurons, and are then transported via the vagus nerve to the brain where they spread in a characteristic pattern known as the Braak model (Braak et al., 2003). Amyloid deposits in amyloidosis diseases can likewise be transmitted via fibrillar seeds in the body (Westermark et al., 2018); they can even spread among individuals in animal studies through oral ingestion or intravenous injection (Lundmark et al., 2002), likely via the gastrointestinal tract. ...

Transmissibility of systemic amyloidosis by a prion-like mechanism

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences