| Literature DB >> 25471398 |
Saeed Sadigh-Eteghad1, Babak Sabermarouf, Alireza Majdi, Mahnaz Talebi, Mehdi Farhoudi, Javad Mahmoudi.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent form of dementia which affects people older than 60 years of age. In AD, the dysregulation of the amyloid-beta (Aβ) level leads to the appearance of senile plaques which contain Aβ depositions. Aβ is a complex biological molecule which interacts with many types of receptors and/or forms insoluble assemblies and, eventually, its nonphysiological depositions alternate with the normal neuronal conditions. In this situation, AD signs appear and the patients experience marked cognitional disabilities. In general, intellect, social skills, personality, and memory are influenced by this disease and, in the long run, it leads to a reduction in quality of life and life expectancy. Due to the pivotal role of Aβ in the pathobiology of AD, a great deal of effort has been made to reveal its exact role in neuronal dysfunctions and to finding efficacious therapeutic strategies against its adverse neuronal outcomes. Hence, the determination of its different molecular assemblies and the mechanisms underlying its pathological effects are of interest. In the present paper, some of the well-established structural forms of Aβ, its interactions with various receptors and possible molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying its neurotoxicity are discussed. In addition, several Aβ-based rodent models of AD are reviewed.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25471398 PMCID: PMC5588216 DOI: 10.1159/000369101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Princ Pract ISSN: 1011-7571 Impact factor: 1.927
Fig. 1The 3 major features of AD within the neuronal system. a Cleavage of APP, and formation and accumulation of extraneuronal Aβ. b Formation and deposition of intraneuronal NFTs. c Synaptic dysfunction due to Aβ accumulation and its interaction with receptors. AICD = APP intracellular domain.
Fig. 2Interrelationship between Aβ and NFT formation.
Some of amyloid-based transgenic animal models of AD
| Transgenic line | Promoter | Memory deficits | Neurological characteristic | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDAPP | PDGF β | + | Aß deposits, neuritic plaques, synaptic loss, astrocytosis and microgliosis | |
| BRI-Aß42 | MoPrp | – | Aß plaques in the cerebellum, extracellular Aß plaques in the hippocampus | |
| Arc Aß | MoPrP | + | Aß deposits in cortex and hippocampus, Aß plaques, cerebral amyloid angiopathy present | |
| TgAPParc | Thyl.2 | + | High APParc levels, amyloid deposition in subiculum and thalamus | |
| 5XFAD | Thyl | + | Aß42 accumulation, amyloid deposition and gliosis, synapse degeneration, increased p25 levels, neuron loss | |
| Tg-SwDI/B | Thyl.2 | + | Plaques in hippocampus and cortex, Aß deposits throughout forebrain | |
| Tet-APPSwe/Ind | Tetracycline Responsive (pTetSplice) | NA | High MMo/huAPP overexpiration, doxycycline inhibits APP expression and reduces Aß production | |
| APPSWE | Hamster PrP | + | Aß plaques, oxidative lipid and glycoxidative damage | |
| PDGF-AppswInd | PDGF β | + | Aß and Aß42 in neocortical and hippocampus, high levels of Aß1 – 42 resulted in Aß plaques | |
| McGill-R-Thyl-APP | Thyl.2 | + | Intraneuronal Aß accumulation, extracellular Aß deposits, thioflavine S-positive amyloid plaques, glial activation | |
NA = Not assessed.