TY - JOUR
T1 - Basic Science and Pathogenesis
AU - Gandy, Sam E.
AU - Castranio, Emilie L.
AU - Varghese, Merina
AU - Argyrousi, Elentina K.
AU - Tripathi, Kuldeep
AU - Söderberg, Linda
AU - Bresnahan, Erin
AU - Lerner, David
AU - Garretti, Francesca
AU - Zhang, Hong
AU - de Loo, Jonathan Van
AU - Talty, Ronan
AU - Glabe, Charles G.
AU - Levy, Efrat
AU - Wang, Minghui
AU - Zhang, Bin
AU - Lannfelt, Lars
AU - Lubell, William D.
AU - Guerin, Brigitte
AU - Rahimipour, Shai
AU - Dickstein, Dara
AU - Arancio, Ottavio
AU - Ehrlich, Michelle E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Alzheimer's Association. Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.
PY - 2024/12/1
Y1 - 2024/12/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Clinicopathological studies of Alzheimer's disease (AD) have demonstrated that synaptic or neuronal loss and clinical cognitive decline do not reliably correlate with fibrillar amyloid burden. We created a transgenic mouse model overexpressing Dutch (E693Q) mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP) driven by the pan-neuronal Thy1 promoter. Accumulation of APP carboxyl-terminal fragments was observed in the brains of these mice, which develop an impaired learning phenotype directly proportional to brain oAβ levels. METHOD: Male and female TgAPPE693Q mice and wildtype controls were compared using learning behavioral studies, immunocytochemistry, transmission electron microscopy, electrophysiology, protofibril-specific assays, and single cell RNA sequencing. RESULT: Brain levels of nonfibrillar oAβ in Dutch mice were shown to increase aging-dependently using A11 immunocytochemistry and FITC-cyclic peptide (FITC-CP-2) microscopy. Two assays excluded the presence of protofibrils. Electrophysiological characterization of hippocampal synapses in Dutch and wildtype mice at ∼7 and ∼11 months revealed no change in basal excitatory transmission, consistent with normal density and morphology of mGluR2/3+ synapses in hippocampal CA1 of the same mice. One exception was increased postsynaptic density in non-perforated mGluR-2/3+ synapses in the Dutch mice. Functional characterization of the presynaptic terminal showed abnormalities in post-tetanic potentiation, synaptic fatigue, and synaptic replenishment after depletion in Dutch mice. Single cell RNA-seq to elucidate cell-type specific transcriptional responses to oAβ revealed altered transcriptional profiles in multiple cell types. Unexpectedly, no obvious differences existed between profiles of microglia from Dutch compared to those from wildtype mice. Excitatory neurons showed the most altered profile which was associated with 'protein translation' and 'oxidative phosphorylation'. Ultrastructural analysis of presynaptic mitochondria at excitatory synapses revealed fewer mitochondria in the presynaptic terminals of Dutch mice. CONCLUSION: The profound learning behavior deficits in Dutch mice are associated with presynaptic functional deficits and mitochondrial abnormalities in excitatory neurons of the hippocampus. Nonfibrillar oAβ deposits were revealed by co-localization of A11 immunoreactivity with FITC-CP-2 microscopy. Mice accumulating only oAβ may be especially useful for further characterization of the oligomer-specific cyclic azaglycine PET tracer Lys (64Cu/NOTA)1]-CP-7 that shows robust PET signal from 44-day-old presymptomatic 5xFAD mice [Habashi, M. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2022].
AB - BACKGROUND: Clinicopathological studies of Alzheimer's disease (AD) have demonstrated that synaptic or neuronal loss and clinical cognitive decline do not reliably correlate with fibrillar amyloid burden. We created a transgenic mouse model overexpressing Dutch (E693Q) mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP) driven by the pan-neuronal Thy1 promoter. Accumulation of APP carboxyl-terminal fragments was observed in the brains of these mice, which develop an impaired learning phenotype directly proportional to brain oAβ levels. METHOD: Male and female TgAPPE693Q mice and wildtype controls were compared using learning behavioral studies, immunocytochemistry, transmission electron microscopy, electrophysiology, protofibril-specific assays, and single cell RNA sequencing. RESULT: Brain levels of nonfibrillar oAβ in Dutch mice were shown to increase aging-dependently using A11 immunocytochemistry and FITC-cyclic peptide (FITC-CP-2) microscopy. Two assays excluded the presence of protofibrils. Electrophysiological characterization of hippocampal synapses in Dutch and wildtype mice at ∼7 and ∼11 months revealed no change in basal excitatory transmission, consistent with normal density and morphology of mGluR2/3+ synapses in hippocampal CA1 of the same mice. One exception was increased postsynaptic density in non-perforated mGluR-2/3+ synapses in the Dutch mice. Functional characterization of the presynaptic terminal showed abnormalities in post-tetanic potentiation, synaptic fatigue, and synaptic replenishment after depletion in Dutch mice. Single cell RNA-seq to elucidate cell-type specific transcriptional responses to oAβ revealed altered transcriptional profiles in multiple cell types. Unexpectedly, no obvious differences existed between profiles of microglia from Dutch compared to those from wildtype mice. Excitatory neurons showed the most altered profile which was associated with 'protein translation' and 'oxidative phosphorylation'. Ultrastructural analysis of presynaptic mitochondria at excitatory synapses revealed fewer mitochondria in the presynaptic terminals of Dutch mice. CONCLUSION: The profound learning behavior deficits in Dutch mice are associated with presynaptic functional deficits and mitochondrial abnormalities in excitatory neurons of the hippocampus. Nonfibrillar oAβ deposits were revealed by co-localization of A11 immunoreactivity with FITC-CP-2 microscopy. Mice accumulating only oAβ may be especially useful for further characterization of the oligomer-specific cyclic azaglycine PET tracer Lys (64Cu/NOTA)1]-CP-7 that shows robust PET signal from 44-day-old presymptomatic 5xFAD mice [Habashi, M. et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2022].
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85214589349&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.084937
DO - https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.084937
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 39751744
SN - 1552-5260
VL - 20
SP - e084937
JO - Alzheimer's and Dementia
JF - Alzheimer's and Dementia
ER -