A new therapeutic target in traumatic brain injury (TBI)? Serum amyloid P component accumulates and persists in neurones following TBI - presented by Dr Ping Yip PhD and Professor Christopher Uff PhD, FFRCS and Professor Martin Rossor MD FRCP FMedSci and Prof Sir Mark Pepys FRS FMedSci and Professor Daniel Perl MD

A new therapeutic target in traumatic brain injury (TBI)? Serum amyloid P component accumulates and persists in neurones following TBI

Ping Yip, Christopher Uff, Martin Rossor and Mark Pepys

Dr Ping Yip PhDProfessor Christopher Uff PhD, FFRCSProfessor Martin Rossor MD FRCP FMedSciProf Sir Mark Pepys FRS FMedSci
Open Biology

Associated Open Biology article

P. K. Yip et al. (2023) Serum amyloid P component accumulates and persists in neurones following traumatic brain injury. Open Biology
Article of record
A new therapeutic target in traumatic brain injury (TBI)? Serum amyloid P component accumulates and persists in neurones following TBI
Dr Ping Yip PhD
Ping Yip
Queen Mary University of London
Professor Christopher Uff PhD, FFRCS
Christopher Uff
Queen Mary University of London and Barts Health NHS Trust
Professor Martin Rossor MD FRCP FMedSci
Martin Rossor
University College London
Prof Sir Mark Pepys FRS FMedSci
Mark Pepys
University College London
Chaired by Daniel Perl

The mechanisms underlying neurodegenerative sequelae of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are poorly understood. The normal plasma protein, serum amyloid P component (SAP), which is normally rigorously excluded from the brain, is directly neurocytotoxic for cerebral neurones and also binds to Aβ amyloid fibrils and neurofibrillary tangles, promoting formation and persistence of Aβ fibrils. Increased brain exposure to SAP is common to many risk factors for dementia, including TBI, and dementia at death in the elderly is significantly associated with neocortical SAP content. Here, in 18 of 30 severe TBI cases, we report immunohistochemical staining for SAP in contused brain tissue with blood–brain barrier disruption. The SAP was localized to neurofilaments in a subset of neurones and their processes, particularly damaged axons and cell bodies, and was present regardless of the time after injury. No SAP was detected on astrocytes, microglia, cerebral capillaries or serotoninergic neurones and was absent from undamaged brain. C-reactive protein, the control plasma protein most closely similar to SAP, was only detected within capillary lumina. The appearance of neurocytotoxic SAP in the brain after TBI, and its persistent, selective deposition in cerebral neurones, are consistent with a potential contribution to subsequent neurodegeneration.

References
  • 1.
    P. K. Yip et al. (2023) Serum amyloid P component accumulates and persists in neurones following traumatic brain injury. Open Biology
  • 2.
    A. F. Schmidt et al. (2024) Genetic evidence for serum amyloid P component as a drug target in neurodegenerative disorders. Open Biology
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P. Yip et al. (2024, October 29), A new therapeutic target in traumatic brain injury (TBI)? Serum amyloid P component accumulates and persists in neurones following TBI
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