Literature DB >> 19272356

Longitudinal regional brain volume changes quantified in normal aging and Alzheimer's APP x PS1 mice using MRI.

Satheesh Maheswaran1, Hervé Barjat, Daniel Rueckert, Simon T Bate, David R Howlett, Lorna Tilling, Sean C Smart, Andreas Pohlmann, Jill C Richardson, Thomas Hartkens, Derek L G Hill, Neil Upton, Jo V Hajnal, Michael F James.   

Abstract

In humans, mutations of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and presenilins (PS) 1 and 2 are associated with amyloid deposition, brain structural change and cognitive decline, like in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Mice expressing these proteins have illuminated neurodegenerative disease processes but, unlike in humans, quantitative imaging has been little used to systematically determine their effects, or those of normal aging, on brain structure in vivo. Accordingly, we investigated wildtype (WT) and TASTPM mice (expressing human APP(695(K595N, M596L)) x PS1(M146V)) longitudinally using MRI. Automated global and local image registration, allied to a standard digital atlas, provided pairwise segmentation of 13 brain regions. We found the mature mouse brain, unlike in humans, enlarges significantly from 6-14 months old (WT 3.8+/-1.7%, mean+/-SD, P<0.0001). Significant changes were also seen in other WT brain regions, providing an anatomical benchmark for comparing other mouse strains and models of brain disorder. In TASTPM, progressive amyloidosis and astrogliosis, detected immunohistochemically, reflected even larger whole brain changes (5.1+/-1.4%, P<0.0001, transgenexage interaction P=0.0311). Normalising regional volumes to whole brain measurements revealed significant, prolonged, WT-TASTPM volume differences, suggesting transgene effects establish at <6 months old of age in most regions. As in humans, gray matter-rich regions decline with age (e.g. thalamus, cerebral cortex and caudoputamen); ventricles and white matter (corpus callosum, corticospinal tract, fornix system) increase; in TASTPMs such trends often varied significantly from WT (especially hippocampus). The pervasive, age-related structural changes between WT and AD transgenic mice (and mouse and human) suggest subtle but fundamental species differences and AD transgene effects.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19272356     DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2009.02.045

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  31 in total

1.  Description and classification of normal and pathological aging processes based on brain magnetic resonance imaging morphology measures.

Authors:  Jorge Luis Perez-Gonzalez; Oscar Yanez-Suarez; Ernesto Bribiesca; Fernando Arámbula Cosío; Juan Ramón Jiménez; Veronica Medina-Bañuelos
Journal:  J Med Imaging (Bellingham)       Date:  2014-10-07

2.  Stress-induced grey matter loss determined by MRI is primarily due to loss of dendrites and their synapses.

Authors:  Mustafa S Kassem; Jim Lagopoulos; Tim Stait-Gardner; William S Price; Tariq W Chohan; Jonathon C Arnold; Sean N Hatton; Maxwell R Bennett
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2012-11-09       Impact factor: 5.590

3.  The antihelminthic moxidectin enhances tonic GABA currents in rodent hippocampal pyramidal neurons.

Authors:  Jay Spampanato; Anne Gibson; F Edward Dudek
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2018-01-24       Impact factor: 2.714

4.  Spatiotemporal mapping of brain atrophy in mouse models of Huntington's disease using longitudinal in vivo magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Manisha Aggarwal; Wenzhen Duan; Zhipeng Hou; Neal Rakesh; Qi Peng; Christopher A Ross; Michael I Miller; Susumu Mori; Jiangyang Zhang
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2012-02-09       Impact factor: 6.556

Review 5.  APP transgenic mice: their use and limitations.

Authors:  Claudia Balducci; Gianluigi Forloni
Journal:  Neuromolecular Med       Date:  2010-12-09       Impact factor: 3.843

6.  Long-term dantrolene treatment reduced intraneuronal amyloid in aged Alzheimer triple transgenic mice.

Authors:  Zhen Wu; Bin Yang; Chunxia Liu; Ge Liang; Maryellen F Eckenhoff; Weixia Liu; Stephen Pickup; Qingcheng Meng; Yuke Tian; Shitong Li; Huafeng Wei
Journal:  Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord       Date:  2015 Jul-Sep       Impact factor: 2.703

7.  In vivo imaging biomarkers in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease: are we lost in translation or breaking through?

Authors:  Benoît Delatour; Stéphane Epelbaum; Alexandra Petiet; Marc Dhenain
Journal:  Int J Alzheimers Dis       Date:  2010-09-30

8.  Quantitative mouse brain phenotyping based on single and multispectral MR protocols.

Authors:  Alexandra Badea; Sally Gewalt; Brian B Avants; James J Cook; G Allan Johnson
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2012-07-23       Impact factor: 6.556

9.  Longitudinal characterization of brain atrophy of a Huntington's disease mouse model by automated morphological analyses of magnetic resonance images.

Authors:  Jiangyang Zhang; Qi Peng; Qing Li; Neda Jahanshad; Zhipeng Hou; Mali Jiang; Naoki Masuda; Douglas R Langbehn; Michael I Miller; Susumu Mori; Christopher A Ross; Wenzhen Duan
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2009-10-19       Impact factor: 6.556

10.  In vivo quantitative whole-brain diffusion tensor imaging analysis of APP/PS1 transgenic mice using voxel-based and atlas-based methods.

Authors:  Yuan-Yuan Qin; Mu-Wei Li; Shun Zhang; Yan Zhang; Ling-Yun Zhao; Hao Lei; Kenichi Oishi; Wen-Zhen Zhu
Journal:  Neuroradiology       Date:  2013-05-05       Impact factor: 2.804

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