Iowa Mutation Modeling Program: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "== Iowa Mutation Modeling Program == '''Mutation:''' Aβ Asp23Asn '''Objective:''' Determine whether mutation-specific changes in aggregation kinetics are sufficient to explain altered amyloid deposition patterns and clinical onset timing. ---- === 1. Biological Background === ==== 1.1 Genetic and Molecular Context ==== * Description of the Asp23Asn substitution * Location within Aβ sequence * Known biochemical effects (e.g., altered charge, isomerization propensit..."
 
 
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=== 2. Working Mechanistic Hypothesis ===
=== 2. Working Mechanistic Hypothesis ===


Precise statement of the causal claim under investigation.
=== 2. Working Mechanistic Hypothesis ===


Example structure:
==== 2.1 Core claim ====
The Iowa mutation (Aβ D23N) increases the ''in vivo'' burden of neurotoxic soluble oligomers by driving the formation of unusually stable, rapidly forming fibrils that deposit predominantly in vascular-associated, diffuse fibril “clouds” (CAA / perivascular deposits), thereby increasing catalytic fibril surface area available for oligomer generation.


* The Asp23Asn mutation alters local electrostatic interactions.
==== 2.2 Empirical anchors from Tomidokoro et al. (2010) ====
* This increases fibril thermodynamic stability.
The working hypothesis is grounded in the following observations/arguments:
* Increased stability modifies aggregation kinetics (nucleation, elongation, secondary nucleation).
* Altered kinetics propagate to macroscopic plaque accumulation dynamics.


Clearly distinguish:
* A substantial fraction of deposited Aβ in Iowa brain tissue is post-translationally modified at residue 23: approximately 10–30% contains isoAsp23. <ref name="Tomidokoro2010_isoAsp">Tomidokoro Y. ''et al.'' (2010). Iowa Variant of Familial Alzheimer’s Disease: Accumulation of Posttranslationally Modified AβD23N in Parenchymal and Cerebrovascular Amyloid Deposits. (See discussion text reporting ∼10–30% isoAsp23.)</ref>
* Assumptions
* D23N may act as a “fast track” to isoAsp formation because Asn deamidation typically produces isoAsp much faster than Asp isomerization (order-of-magnitude statement in the discussion). <ref name="Tomidokoro2010_fasttrack">Tomidokoro Y. ''et al.'' (2010). Discussion: Asn deamidation typically yields ∼30× faster isoAsp formation than Asp isomerization.</ref>
* Empirical constraints
* isoAsp-bearing molecules exhibit enhanced ''in vitro'' fibrillization kinetics relative to wild-type, and D23N strongly accelerates fibrillization (shortened lag phase; much faster ThT kinetics). <ref name="Tomidokoro2010_ThT">Tomidokoro Y. ''et al.'' (2010). Discussion + Thioflavin-T kinetics section/figure: D23N drives dramatic acceleration; isoAsp contributes modestly but measurably.</ref>
* Open uncertainties
* isoAsp at other Aβ sites (e.g., positions 1 and 7) is associated with decreased proteolytic sensitivity, suggesting isoAsp23 may also contribute to impaired clearance once aggregated. <ref name="Tomidokoro2010_clearance">Tomidokoro Y. ''et al.'' (2010). Discussion: isoAsp at positions 1 and 7 decreases proteolytic sensitivity; potential relevance to Iowa aggressiveness.</ref>
 
==== 2.3 Structural/mechanistic support from Warmack et al. (2019) ====
Warmack et al. provide atomic-resolution structural evidence that isoAsp23 alters protofilament interfaces in a way that can plausibly increase both aggregation rate and fibril stability, and explicitly discuss that the Iowa mutation may operate similarly and/or via faster production of isoAsp23. They also report that PCMT1 does not effectively repair isoAsp23 once in aggregated forms. <ref name="Warmack2019">Warmack RA. ''et al.'' (2019). Structure of amyloid-β (20–34) with Alzheimer’s-associated isomerization at Asp23 reveals a distinct protofilament interface. ''Nature Communications''.</ref>
 
==== 2.4 Quantitative hypothesis: “surface-area amplification” ====
We translate the above into a quantitative causal chain:
 
(1) D23N increases the rate of isoAsp23 formation and/or stabilizes the fibril state. 
(2) Faster fibrillization and higher stability favor vascular/perivascular diffuse fibril deposition (CAA-associated “clouds”). 
(3) Diffuse fibrils yield higher total exposed fibril surface area per deposited mass than compact neuritic plaques. 
(4) Fibril surfaces catalyze oligomer generation (secondary nucleation / surface-catalyzed pathways). 
(5) If clearance is impaired (proteolysis resistance; limited repair; immune sink saturation), soluble oligomer concentration increases sufficiently to drive toxicity.
 
We treat steps (2)–(5) as a model to be constrained by data.
 
----
 
==== 2.5 Minimal “brain-sized” production–clearance model (first-pass) ====
 
Let:
* <math>M(t)</math> = local monomer (or soluble Aβ) concentration (mol·L<sup>−1</sup>)
* <math>F(t)</math> = fibril mass concentration (or total fibril mass in a compartment)
* <math>A(t)</math> = total exposed fibril surface area (m<sup>2</sup>) in the relevant compartment (e.g., vascular wall + perivascular region)
* <math>O(t)</math> = soluble oligomer concentration (mol·L<sup>−1</sup>)
* <math>f_{\mathrm{iso}}(t)</math> = fraction of deposited molecules containing isoAsp23
 
'''IsoAsp formation (phenomenological):'''
<math>
\frac{df_{\mathrm{iso}}}{dt} = k_{\mathrm{iso}}(1-f_{\mathrm{iso}}) - k_{\mathrm{repair}} f_{\mathrm{iso}}
</math>
 
'''Aggregation / fibril growth (minimal):'''
<math>
\frac{dF}{dt} = k_n M^n + k_2 M^m A - k_{\mathrm{clear},F} F
</math>
 
Here <math>k_2</math> captures surface-catalyzed addition / secondary nucleation terms; <math>k_{\mathrm{clear},F}</math> is effective clearance of fibrillar material.
 
'''Surface area mapping (“morphology parameter”):'''
<math>
A(t) = \alpha_{\mathrm{morph}} \, F(t)
</math>
 
where <math>\alpha_{\mathrm{morph}}</math> has units of (surface area)/(fibril mass) and encodes the difference between compact plaques vs diffuse CAA fibril clouds. The key claim is:
<math>
\alpha_{\mathrm{CAA}} \gg \alpha_{\mathrm{plaque}}
</math>
 
'''Oligomer production on fibril surfaces:'''
<math>
\frac{dO}{dt} = k_{\mathrm{cat}} M^p A - k_{\mathrm{clear},O} O
</math>
 
At quasi–steady state (fast oligomer dynamics relative to years-scale deposition), this gives:
<math>
O^{*} \approx \frac{k_{\mathrm{cat}}}{k_{\mathrm{clear},O}} M^p A
</math>
 
Thus the “surface-area amplification” prediction is:
<math>
\frac{O^{*}_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{O^{*}_{\mathrm{plaque}}} \approx
\frac{\alpha_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{\alpha_{\mathrm{plaque}}}
\cdot
\frac{F_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{F_{\mathrm{plaque}}}
\cdot
\left(\frac{M_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{M_{\mathrm{plaque}}}\right)^p
\end{math}
 
'''Toxicity / neuronal loss (minimal hazard model):'''
Let <math>N(t)</math> denote viable neurons (or synapses) in a region. A minimal coupling is:
<math>
\frac{dN}{dt} = -k_{\mathrm{tox}} \, O^q \, N
</math>
 
which implies an exponential survival curve with an oligomer-dependent hazard.
 
----
 
==== 2.6 What we would try to estimate (order-of-magnitude targets) ====
To turn the above into numbers, we need:
 
* <math>\alpha_{\mathrm{morph}}</math>: surface area per unit fibril mass for (i) diffuse CAA-associated fibrils vs (ii) compact plaques.
* <math>k_{\mathrm{cat}}</math>: oligomer generation flux per unit surface area (or inferred from ''in vitro'' secondary nucleation fits).
* <math>k_{\mathrm{clear},O}</math>: effective oligomer clearance (proteolysis + transport + immune uptake).
* Compartments/volumes: vascular wall / perivascular space volume to convert oligomer counts to concentration.
* A toxicity mapping <math>k_{\mathrm{tox}}, q</math> that can be anchored to synapse loss or neuronal death observables.
 
----
 
==== 2.7 Immediate, testable predictions ====
Even with bold assumptions, the model yields falsifiable consequences:
 
* If CAA morphology implies <math>\alpha_{\mathrm{CAA}} \gg \alpha_{\mathrm{plaque}}</math>, oligomer load should scale with vascular/perivascular amyloid burden more strongly than with parenchymal plaque load.
* Regions with high vascular amyloid should exhibit disproportionately high markers of synaptic injury relative to plaque-centric AD, after controlling for total deposited mass.
* Interventions that reduce fibril surface availability (without necessarily reducing total mass) should reduce oligomer-associated toxicity signals more than expected from plaque mass reduction alone.
 
(These predictions should be linked later to specific observables: PET patterns, CSF markers, region-specific atrophy, vascular dysfunction readouts.)


----
----

Latest revision as of 21:26, 1 March 2026

Iowa Mutation Modeling Program

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Mutation: Aβ Asp23Asn Objective: Determine whether mutation-specific changes in aggregation kinetics are sufficient to explain altered amyloid deposition patterns and clinical onset timing.


1. Biological Background

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1.1 Genetic and Molecular Context

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  • Description of the Asp23Asn substitution
  • Location within Aβ sequence
  • Known biochemical effects (e.g., altered charge, isomerization propensity)

1.2 Reported Phenotypic Features

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  • Age of onset distribution
  • Neuropathological characteristics
  • Reported fibril properties
  • Relevant clinical observations

2. Working Mechanistic Hypothesis

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2. Working Mechanistic Hypothesis

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2.1 Core claim

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The Iowa mutation (Aβ D23N) increases the in vivo burden of neurotoxic soluble oligomers by driving the formation of unusually stable, rapidly forming fibrils that deposit predominantly in vascular-associated, diffuse fibril “clouds” (CAA / perivascular deposits), thereby increasing catalytic fibril surface area available for oligomer generation.

2.2 Empirical anchors from Tomidokoro et al. (2010)

[edit | edit source]

The working hypothesis is grounded in the following observations/arguments:

  • A substantial fraction of deposited Aβ in Iowa brain tissue is post-translationally modified at residue 23: approximately 10–30% contains isoAsp23. [1]
  • D23N may act as a “fast track” to isoAsp formation because Asn deamidation typically produces isoAsp much faster than Asp isomerization (order-of-magnitude statement in the discussion). [2]
  • isoAsp-bearing molecules exhibit enhanced in vitro fibrillization kinetics relative to wild-type, and D23N strongly accelerates fibrillization (shortened lag phase; much faster ThT kinetics). [3]
  • isoAsp at other Aβ sites (e.g., positions 1 and 7) is associated with decreased proteolytic sensitivity, suggesting isoAsp23 may also contribute to impaired clearance once aggregated. [4]

2.3 Structural/mechanistic support from Warmack et al. (2019)

[edit | edit source]

Warmack et al. provide atomic-resolution structural evidence that isoAsp23 alters protofilament interfaces in a way that can plausibly increase both aggregation rate and fibril stability, and explicitly discuss that the Iowa mutation may operate similarly and/or via faster production of isoAsp23. They also report that PCMT1 does not effectively repair isoAsp23 once in aggregated forms. [5]

2.4 Quantitative hypothesis: “surface-area amplification”

[edit | edit source]

We translate the above into a quantitative causal chain:

(1) D23N increases the rate of isoAsp23 formation and/or stabilizes the fibril state. (2) Faster fibrillization and higher stability favor vascular/perivascular diffuse fibril deposition (CAA-associated “clouds”). (3) Diffuse fibrils yield higher total exposed fibril surface area per deposited mass than compact neuritic plaques. (4) Fibril surfaces catalyze oligomer generation (secondary nucleation / surface-catalyzed pathways). (5) If clearance is impaired (proteolysis resistance; limited repair; immune sink saturation), soluble oligomer concentration increases sufficiently to drive toxicity.

We treat steps (2)–(5) as a model to be constrained by data.


2.5 Minimal “brain-sized” production–clearance model (first-pass)

[edit | edit source]

Let:

  • M(t) = local monomer (or soluble Aβ) concentration (mol·L−1)
  • F(t) = fibril mass concentration (or total fibril mass in a compartment)
  • A(t) = total exposed fibril surface area (m2) in the relevant compartment (e.g., vascular wall + perivascular region)
  • O(t) = soluble oligomer concentration (mol·L−1)
  • fiso(t) = fraction of deposited molecules containing isoAsp23

IsoAsp formation (phenomenological): dfisodt=kiso(1fiso)krepairfiso

Aggregation / fibril growth (minimal): dFdt=knMn+k2MmAkclear,FF

Here k2 captures surface-catalyzed addition / secondary nucleation terms; kclear,F is effective clearance of fibrillar material.

Surface area mapping (“morphology parameter”): A(t)=αmorphF(t)

where αmorph has units of (surface area)/(fibril mass) and encodes the difference between compact plaques vs diffuse CAA fibril clouds. The key claim is: αCAAαplaque

Oligomer production on fibril surfaces: dOdt=kcatMpAkclear,OO

At quasi–steady state (fast oligomer dynamics relative to years-scale deposition), this gives: O*kcatkclear,OMpA

Thus the “surface-area amplification” prediction is: Failed to parse (syntax error): {\displaystyle \frac{O^{*}_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{O^{*}_{\mathrm{plaque}}} \approx \frac{\alpha_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{\alpha_{\mathrm{plaque}}} \cdot \frac{F_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{F_{\mathrm{plaque}}} \cdot \left(\frac{M_{\mathrm{CAA}}}{M_{\mathrm{plaque}}}\right)^p \end{math} '''Toxicity / neuronal loss (minimal hazard model):''' Let <math>N(t)} denote viable neurons (or synapses) in a region. A minimal coupling is: dNdt=ktoxOqN

which implies an exponential survival curve with an oligomer-dependent hazard.


2.6 What we would try to estimate (order-of-magnitude targets)

[edit | edit source]

To turn the above into numbers, we need:

  • αmorph: surface area per unit fibril mass for (i) diffuse CAA-associated fibrils vs (ii) compact plaques.
  • kcat: oligomer generation flux per unit surface area (or inferred from in vitro secondary nucleation fits).
  • kclear,O: effective oligomer clearance (proteolysis + transport + immune uptake).
  • Compartments/volumes: vascular wall / perivascular space volume to convert oligomer counts to concentration.
  • A toxicity mapping ktox,q that can be anchored to synapse loss or neuronal death observables.

2.7 Immediate, testable predictions

[edit | edit source]

Even with bold assumptions, the model yields falsifiable consequences:

  • If CAA morphology implies αCAAαplaque, oligomer load should scale with vascular/perivascular amyloid burden more strongly than with parenchymal plaque load.
  • Regions with high vascular amyloid should exhibit disproportionately high markers of synaptic injury relative to plaque-centric AD, after controlling for total deposited mass.
  • Interventions that reduce fibril surface availability (without necessarily reducing total mass) should reduce oligomer-associated toxicity signals more than expected from plaque mass reduction alone.

(These predictions should be linked later to specific observables: PET patterns, CSF markers, region-specific atrophy, vascular dysfunction readouts.)


3. Mathematical Formalization

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3.1 Aggregation Kinetics Model

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  • Governing equations (e.g., nucleation–elongation framework)
  • Definition of state variables
  • Rate constants
  • Conservation constraints

3.2 Mutation-Specific Modifications

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  • Which parameters differ from wild-type?
  • Justification for parameter changes
  • Sensitivity to parameter variation

3.3 Assumptions and Simplifications

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  • Spatial homogeneity vs heterogeneity
  • Deterministic vs stochastic treatment
  • Boundary conditions

4. Parameterization

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Structured parameter table:

Parameter Symbol Value Source Experimental Context
Primary nucleation rate k_n ... ... in vitro aggregation assay
Elongation rate k_+ ... ... ...
Secondary nucleation rate k_2 ... ... ...

Include:

  • Units
  • Measurement uncertainty
  • Scaling assumptions (in vitro → in vivo)

5. Scaling Strategy

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How molecular kinetics propagate upward.

5.1 From Aggregates to Plaque Load

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  • Mapping monomer/polymer concentration to plaque mass
  • Spatial assumptions

5.2 From Plaque Load to Imaging Signal

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  • Relationship to PET SUVR
  • Assumed conversion functions

5.3 From Plaque Accumulation to Clinical Onset

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  • Threshold hypotheses
  • Network vulnerability assumptions

Explicitly state which links are empirical vs theoretical.


6. Quantitative Predictions

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Clearly enumerated, falsifiable predictions:

  • Predicted shift in age of detectable amyloid PET signal
  • Predicted plaque growth rate differences vs wild-type
  • Predicted regional deposition differences
  • Sensitivity of onset timing to kinetic parameters

Avoid vague language. Use numerical ranges where possible.


7. Comparison with Existing Data

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  • PET studies in Iowa mutation carriers
  • Reported onset ages
  • Neuropathological findings

Explicitly state:

  • Agreement
  • Discrepancies
  • Unexplained features

8. Sensitivity and Identifiability Analysis

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  • Which parameters dominate model behavior?
  • Are multiple parameter combinations indistinguishable?
  • Which measurements would most constrain uncertainty?

This section signals modeling seriousness.


9. Open Problems

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  • Missing kinetic measurements
  • In vivo vs in vitro scaling uncertainties
  • Spatial heterogeneity
  • Interaction with tau pathology

10. Next Steps

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  • Required data
  • Computational refinement
  • Proposed experimental collaborations
  1. Tomidokoro Y. et al. (2010). Iowa Variant of Familial Alzheimer’s Disease: Accumulation of Posttranslationally Modified AβD23N in Parenchymal and Cerebrovascular Amyloid Deposits. (See discussion text reporting ∼10–30% isoAsp23.)
  2. Tomidokoro Y. et al. (2010). Discussion: Asn deamidation typically yields ∼30× faster isoAsp formation than Asp isomerization.
  3. Tomidokoro Y. et al. (2010). Discussion + Thioflavin-T kinetics section/figure: D23N drives dramatic acceleration; isoAsp contributes modestly but measurably.
  4. Tomidokoro Y. et al. (2010). Discussion: isoAsp at positions 1 and 7 decreases proteolytic sensitivity; potential relevance to Iowa aggressiveness.
  5. Warmack RA. et al. (2019). Structure of amyloid-β (20–34) with Alzheimer’s-associated isomerization at Asp23 reveals a distinct protofilament interface. Nature Communications.