Alzheimer's disease (AD) and sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) are both charac-terized by extracellular pathologically conformed aggregates of amyloid proteins-amyloid β-protein (Aβ) and prion protein (PrPSc), respectively. To investigate the potential morphological colocal-ization of Aβ and PrPSc aggregates, we examined the hippocampal regions (archicortex and neocor-tex) of 20 subjects with confirmed comorbid AD and sCJD using neurohistopathological analyses, immunohistochemical methods, and confocal fluorescent microscopy.
Our data showed that extracellular Aβ and PrPSc aggregates tended to be, in most cases, located separately, and "compound" plaques were relatively rare. We observed PrPSc plaque-like structures in the periphery of the non-compact parts of Aβ plaques, as well as in tau protein-positive dystrophic structures.
The AD ABC score according to the NIA-Alzheimer's association guidelines, and prion protein subtype with co-don 129 methionine-valine (M/V) polymorphisms in sCJD, while representing key characteristics of these diseases, did not correlate with the morphology of the Aβ/PrPSc co-aggregates. However, our data showed that PrPSc aggregation could dominate during co-aggregation with non-compact Aβ in the periphery of Aβ plaques.