| Literature DB >> 23126652 |
Dena B Dubal1, Lauren Broestl, Kurtresha Worden.
Abstract
Biologic sex and gonadal hormones matter in human aging and diseases of aging such as Alzheimer's - and the importance of studying their influences relates directly to human health. The goal of this article is to review the literature to date on sex and hormones in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease (AD) with an exclusive focus on interpreting the relevance of findings to the human condition. To this end, we highlight advances in AD and in sex and hormone biology, discuss what these advances mean for merging the two fields, review the current mouse model literature, raise major unresolved questions, and offer a research framework that incorporates human reproductive aging for future studies aimed at translational discoveries in this important area. Unraveling human relevant pathways in sex and hormone-based biology may ultimately pave the way to novel and urgently needed treatments for AD and other neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23126652 PMCID: PMC3524653 DOI: 10.1186/2042-6410-3-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Figure 1Males with AD progress to death faster than females. Survival rate in an AD cohort of age-matched men and women shows that males progress faster to death with sporadic AD in a manner that correlates most closely with cognitive decline. This effect is observed in sporadic [44,45] and early-onset AD [41-43]. Figure adapted from [45] with permission from Neurology.
Figure 2Gonadal hormone decline occurs in human, but not mouse, reproductive aging. (A) Human levels of bioavailable testosterone (blue) in males and estradiol (the most biologically active estrogen) (red) in females decrease dramatically during aging at a time when the brain is vulnerable to neurodegenerative diseases such as AD. Of note, changes in total testosterone (not shown) are more modest. (B) In contrast with the human condition, mouse levels of bioavailable testosterone (blue) and estradiol (red) do not decrease with age. M=male and F=female. Data derived from human [56-60] and mouse [61,62] studies.
Figure 3Research strategy for studying sex differences in mouse models of AD. Gonadectomy of both male and female mice simulates gonadal steroid depletion that occurs in human reproductive aging. It also enables a direct comparison between the sexes that is less confounded by differential, activational effects of gonadal hormones in the male versus female brain.
Figure 4Research strategy for studying females in mouse models of AD. To determine how reproductive aging alters AD-related measures in females, an appropriate strategy is comparing gonadectomized to intact mice. Intact females can be separated into estrogen dominant* (E2: proestrous, estrous) or progesterone dominant** (P4: metestrous, diestrous) stages of the reproductive cycle since these hormones can have opposing effects in the brain. To determine whether hormone replacement alters AD-related measures in females, an appropriate strategy is comparing vehicle- versus hormone-treated mice that have all undergone gonadectomy to simulate human reproductive aging. E2 is estradiol, the most biologically active estrogen in the mammalian reproductive cycle.
Figure 5Research strategy for studying males in mouse models of AD. To determine how reproductive aging alters AD-related measures in males, an appropriate strategy is comparing gonadectomized to intact mice. To determine whether hormone replacement alters AD-related measures in males, an appropriate strategy is comparing vehicle- versus hormone-treated mice that have all undergone gonadectomy to simulate human reproductive aging.
Sex Differences in cognition and behavior in mouse models of AD
| Intact, 8 mos (F), 12 mos (M) | Intact: F vs M | F Tg ↑ activity vs F Ntg; M Tg no deficit (OF)
[ | APPswe-PS1dE9 | |
| Intact, 2–15 mos
[ | Intact: F vs M | F Tg ↓spatial/fear memory at some ages vs F Ntg & M Tg (MWM, PA)
[ | 3xTg-AD
[ | |
| F Tg↔M Tg impairment in novel object recognition (NOR)
[ | TASTPM
[ | |||
| Intact, 2–14 mos | Intact: F vs M | F Tg ↓ SAB at 12-14 mos vs F Ntg and M Tg (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Intact, 2–17 mos | Intact: F vs M | F Tg impaired and no change with age (CTA)
[ | APPswe/ PS1dE9 | |
| M Tg increasingly impaired with age (CTA)
[ | ||||
| Intact, 6 mos | Intact: F vs M | F Tg ↓activity/spatial memory/novel arm preference vs F Ntg; M Tg no deficit (OF, MWM, Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Intact, 6 mos | Intact: F vs M | F Tg ↑ activity & ↑entries into light vs F Ntg; M Tg vice versa (OF, DLB)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| | Intact, 3, 9 mos | Intact: F vs M | M Tg ↑activity & ↓SAB vs M Ntg; F Tg no deficit (OF, Y-maze)
[ | APPsw |
| F Tg ↓spatial memory vs F Ntg 3 mos; M Tg no deficit (Circular Platform) | ||||
| Intact,16 mos | Intact: F vs M | F Tg↔M Tg impairment in spatial acquisition memory (Barnes Maze)
[ | APPswe/ PS1dE9 | |
| Intact, 3, 9 mos
[ | Intact: F vs M | F↔M, Tg↔Ntg, no spatial learning impairments (MWM)
[ | APPsw
[ | |
| 3xTg-AD
[ | ||||
| | Intact, 6, 15 mos | Intact: F vs M | M Tg ↑center time vs F Tg and M Ntg (OF)
[ | 3xTg-AD |
| Intact, 8 mos (F), 12 mos (M) | Intact: F vs M | COX-2 overexp ↓SAB in F Tg; no change or impairment in M Tg (Y-maze)
[ | APPswe/ PS1dE9 | |
| COX-2 overexp ↔ novel arm preference | ||||
| Intact, 6 mos | Intact: F vs M | Running ↑open arm entries in F Tg & Ntg and ↓ in M Tg & Ntg (EPM | 3xTg-AD | |
| Intact, 6 mos | Intact: F vs M | Running ↑spatial memory/novel arm preference in F Tg vs non-running F Tg; no effect or impairment in M Tg (MWM, Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD |
Symbols: ↑=increase, ↓=decrease, ↔=no change or difference.
Abbreviations: F=Female, M=Male, Ntg=non-transgenic, Tg=transgenic, mos=months, d=day, SAB=spontaneous alternating behavior (thought to reflect working memory), MWM=Morris water maze, OF=open field, PA=passive avoidance, CTA=conditioned taste aversion, NOR=novel object recognition, DLB=dark-light box, EPM=elevated plus maze, COX-2=cyclooxygenase 2, overexp=overexpression.
A, Latency to reach escape hole and number of errors.
B, Preference for the novel arm in Y-maze thought to reflect spatial recognition memory [114].
C, No 3xTg-AD effect was observed in the EPM [117].
Female studies of cognition & behavior in mouse models of AD
| Gnx 3 mos | N/A | Intact vs Gnx | Gnx ↓ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Gnx ↓ open arm time (EPM)
[ | |||||
| Gnx 3 mos | N/A | Intact vs Gnx | Gnx ↔ spatial memory (MWM)
[ | APP+PS1 | |
| | VCD 2-2.5 mos | N/A | Intact vs VCD | VCD ↔ spatial/working memory (RAWM)
[ | APPswe |
| Gnx 3 mo | Immediate s.c. E2 (0.025 mg) 90 d | Gnx: Veh vs E2 | E2 ↑ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| E2 ↓ freezing (FST)
[ | |||||
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. PPT (0.25 mg) 90 d | Gnx: Veh vs PPT | PPT ↑ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. DPN (0.25 mg) 90 d | Gnx: Veh vs DPN | DPN ↔ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate, 3, & 6 mo later, s.c. E2 (0.18 mg) | Gnx vs Gnx + E2 | E2 ↔ spatial memory (MWM)
[ | APP+PS1 | |
| VCD 2-2.5 mos | Immediate s.c. E2 (0.36 mg) 90 d | VCD vs VCD+E2 | E2 ↔ spatial/working memory (RAWM)
[ | APPswe | |
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. P4 (25 mg) 90 d | Gnx: Veh vs P4 | P4 ↔ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| P4 ↑ open arm time, ↓ freezing (EPM, FST)
[ | |||||
| Gnx 6 mos | Immediate s.c. P4 (25 mg) 90+d | Gnx vs Gnx + P4 | P4↔ spatial memory (NPR, MWM)
[ | APPswe+ PSEN1ΔE9 | |
| Gnx 3 mos | Delayed s.c. P4 (2.8 mg) 10 d off/on | Gnx: Veh vs P4 | P4 ↔ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| P4↑ open arm time, ↓ freezing (EPM, FST)
[ | |||||
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. E2 (0.025 mg) + P4 (25 mg) 90 d | Gnx: Veh vs E2+ P4 | E2+ P4 ↑ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. E2 (0.025 mg) + P4(25 mg) 90 d | Gnx: Veh vs E2+ P4 | E2+ P4 ↔SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| E2+P4 ↑ open arm time, ↓ freezing (FST, EPM)
[ | |||||
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. E2 (0.025 mg) 90 d + P4 (2.8 mg) 30 d cycles | Gnx: Veh vs E2+ P4 | E2+ P4 ↑ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| E2+P4 ↑ open arm time, ↓ freezing (FST, EPM)
[ | |||||
| 21 mos | I.M. injection of leuprolide followed by depot (7.5 mg/kg) | Intact: Veh vs leuprolide | leuprolide ↑ SAB in aging (Y-maze)
[ | Tg2576 | |
| Postnatal d1–7 | IP injection of T (100 μg/d) | Intact: Veh vs T | T↔SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD |
Symbols: ↑=increase, ↓=decrease, ↔=no change.
Abbreviations: Tg=transgenic, mos=months, d=day, E=estradiol (a type of estrogen), P=progesterone, LH=Leutinizing hormone, VCD=4-vinylcyclohexene diepoxide (causes chemically-induced ovarian atrophy), s.c.=subcutaneous, I.M.=intramuscular, IP=intraperitoneal, SAB=spontaneous alternating behavior (thought to reflect working memory), FST=forced swim test, RAWM=radial arm water maze, NPR=novel place recognition, EPM=elevated plus maze, PPT= Propylpyrazole triol (ERα agonist), DPN= Diarylpropionitrile (ERβ agonist), leuprolide=leuprolide acetate (gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist).
A, All comparisons are between groups of AD Tg mice.
Figure 6Hypothesis: Estrogen replacement therapy is beneficial in normal aging, but detrimental in AD or to those at risk of developing AD.
Male studies of cognition & behavior in mouse models of AD
| Gnx 3 mos | N/A | Intact vs Gnx | Gnx ↓ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| Postnatal d1-20 | IP injection of flutamide (50 mg/kg/d) | Intact: Veh vs Flutamide | Flutamide ↓ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD | |
| None | N/A | Intact: Aromatase+/− vs Aromatase+/+ | Aromatase+/− ↑ spatial memory (Hole-board)
[ | APP23 | |
| Gnx 3 mos | Immediate s.c. DHT (10 mg) 90+d | Gnx: Veh vs DHT | DHT ↑ SAB (Y-maze)
[ | 3xTg-AD |
Symbols: ↑=increase, ↓=decrease, ↔=no change.
Abbreviations: Tg=transgenic, mos=months, d=day, Gnx=gonadectomy, SAB=spontaneous alternating behavior (thought to reflect working memory), IP=intraperitoneal, Veh=Vehicle, DHT=dihydrotestosterone.
A, All comparisons are between groups of AD Tg mice.
B, Flutamide is an androgen receptor antagonist.
C, Males with aromatase knockdown have increased endogenous testosterone levels, and decreased brain and sera estradiol levels.