You might recall past research efforts to understand whether proteins found alongside amyloid-β aggregates in the aging brain were causing pathology, and possibly causing more pathology than the amyloid-β itself. One of those proteins is midkine, and here researchers present evidence for the presence of midkine close to amyloid-β to be a protective response that in fact hinders amyloid-β aggregation.
Proteomic profiling of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) brains has identified numerous understudied proteins, including midkine (MDK), that are highly upregulated and correlated with amyloid-β (Aβ) from the early disease stage but their roles in disease progression are not fully understood. Here, we present that MDK attenuates Aβ assembly and influences amyloid formation in the 5xFAD amyloidosis mouse model.
MDK protein mitigates fibril formation of both Aβ40 and Aβ42 peptides according to thioflavin T fluorescence, circular dichroism, negative-stain electron microscopy, and nuclear magnetic resonance analyses. Knockout of the Mdk gene in 5xFAD increased amyloid formation and microglial activation in the brain. Further comprehensive mass-spectrometry-based profiling of the whole proteome in these mouse models indicated significant accumulation of Aβ and Aβ-correlated proteins, along with microglial components. Thus, our structural and mouse model studies reveal a protective role of MDK in counteracting amyloid pathology in AD.