| Literature DB >> 28516241 |
Diana K Franco Bocanegra1, James A R Nicoll1,2, Delphine Boche3.
Abstract
The mouse is one of the organisms most widely used as an animal model in biomedical research, due to the particular ease with which it can be handled and reproduced in laboratory. As a member of the mammalian class, mice share with humans many features regarding metabolic pathways, cell morphology and anatomy. However, important biological differences between mice and humans exist and must be taken into consideration when interpreting research results, to properly translate evidence from experimental studies into information that can be useful for human disease prevention and/or treatment. With respect to Alzheimer's disease (AD), much of the experimental information currently known about this disease has been gathered from studies using mainly mice as models. Therefore, it is notably important to fully characterise the differences between mice and humans regarding important aspects of the disease. It is now widely known that inflammation plays an important role in the development of AD, a role that is not only a response to the surrounding pathological environment, but rather seems to be strongly implicated in the aetiology of the disease as indicated by the genetic studies. This review highlights relevant differences in inflammation and in microglia, the innate immune cell of the brain, between mice and humans regarding genetics and morphology in normal ageing, and the relationship of microglia with AD-like pathology, the inflammatory profile, and cognition. We conclude that some noteworthy differences exist between mice and humans regarding microglial characteristics, in distribution, gene expression, and states of activation. This may have repercussions in the way that transgenic mice respond to, and influence, the AD-like pathology. However, despite these differences, human and mouse microglia also show similarities in morphology and behaviour, such that the mouse is a suitable model for studying the role of microglia, as long as these differences are taken into consideration when delineating new strategies to approach the study of neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Animal model; Human brain; Microglia
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28516241 PMCID: PMC5911273 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-017-1729-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neural Transm (Vienna) ISSN: 0300-9564 Impact factor: 3.575
Genetic factors in Alzheimer’s disease
| Early onset/familial Alzheimer’s disease | Late-onset/sporadic Alzheimer’s disease | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene | Mutation | Pathology | Gene | Function of encoded protein |
| APP | KM670/671NL (Swedish) | Increased total Aβ including production and secretion of Aβ42 and Aβ40 (Mullan et al. | APOE | Catabolism of triglyceride-rich lipoprotein constituents. A role in Aβ aggregation and clearance (Corder et al. |
| D694N (Iowa) | Extensive cerebral amyloid angiopathy; Widespread neurofibrillary tangles; Increased fibrillogenesis of the Aβ peptide (Grabowski et al. | BIN1 | Adaptor protein potentially involved in synaptic vesicle endocytosis (Hu et al. | |
| V717I (London) | Mild amyloid angiopathy; numerous plaques and tangles. Increased Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio; increased Aβ42 (Goate et al. | CLU | Secreted chaperone involved in apoptosis and complement regulation (Harold et al. | |
| PS1 | M146V | Increased Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio; increased Aβ42 (Riudavets et al. | ABCA7 | Member of the superfamily of ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, which transport molecules across membranes. Potential role in lipid homeostasis in immune cells (Hollingworth et al. |
| M146L (A>C) | Increased Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio; increased Aβ42 (Shioi et al. | CR1 | Mediates cellular binding to particles and immune complexes via activated complement (Corneveaux et al. | |
| L286 V | Increased Aβ42/Aβ total ratio (Frommelt et al. | PICALM | Recruits clathrin and adaptor protein complex 2 (AP2) to cell membranes at sites of coated-pit formation and clathrin-vesicle assembly (Harold et al. | |
| L166P | Numerous Aβ-positive neuritic plaques throughout the cerebral cortex; Increased Aβ42/Aβ ratio (Moehlmann et al. | MS4A6A | Likely involved in activation of T cells (Hollingworth et al. | |
| PS2 | N141I | Extensive amyloid plaques; Extensive neurofibrillary tangles (typically a Braak score of V or VI); α-synuclein inclusions, especially in the amygdala; Hippocampal sclerosis. Increased Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio; increased Aβ42 (Jayadev et al. | CD33 | Transmembrane receptor expressed on myeloid cells (Hollingworth et al. |
| M239I | Moderate cortical atrophy; Numerous neurofibrillary tangles; Numerous senile plaques, especially in the amygdala. Increased Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio; increased Aβ42 (Finckh et al. | CD2AP | Scaffolding molecule that regulates the actin cytoskeleton. Interacts with filamentous actin and various cell membrane proteins through multiple actin-binding sites | |
| M239 V | Numerous neurofibrillary tangles (Braak stage VI) in addition of plaques; Extracellular “ghost” neurofibrillary tangles (Marcon et al. | TREM2 | Gateway influencing balance between phagocytic and pro-inflammatory microglial activity (Jonsson et al. | |
| HLA-DR5, DBR1 | Immunocompetence, involved in antigen presentation (Hamza et al. | |||
Some of the most important genetic factors associated with AD. In familial AD, mutations are causal, while in sporadic AD, polymorphisms in the listed genes among others have been identified as risk factors
Fig. 1Images of human and mouse microglia immunostained with Iba1. a–c Both species exhibit ramified microglia with several processes. At higher magnification, b microglia in the inferior parietal lobe of a human 70-year-old brain show thicker and shorter processes, maybe representative of reactive/primed microglia as described in the literature (formalin fixed paraffin embedded section of 4 μm thickness, post-mortem delay 31 h), compared to d the mouse cortical microglia that maintain ramified morphology with finer processes at 52 weeks old (paraformaldehyde 4% fixed paraffin embedded section of 10 μm thickness). Haematoxylin and eosin counterstain. Scale bar 50 μm
Microglial morphologies and their distribution in human and mouse brain (from Torres-Platas et al. 2014)
| Morphology | Description | Human (%) | Mouse (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ramified | Small cell body and thin, highly ramified processes | 16 | 90 |
| Primed | Wider cell body but processes are still similarly ramified | 34 | 0 |
| Reactive | Wider and rounder cell body, less ramification | 32 | 6 |
| Amoeboid | Only one or two unramified processes, or no processes at all | 18 | 4 |
Main mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease and their pathological features
| Model | AD pathology | Microglia/gliosis | Cognitive impairment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aβ | APPPS1 (Radde et al. | Aβ deposition starts at 6 weeks in the cortex and at 3–4 months in the hippocampus | Activated microglia observed around Aβ deposits at 6 weeks, as well as increased astrogliosis | Cognitive deficits in spatial learning and memory in the Morris water maze at 7 months |
| Tg2576 (Hsiao et al. | Numerous Aβ plaques present at 11–13 months | Increased microglial density in plaque-forming areas of the brain including the hippocampus, frontal cortex, entorhinal cortex, and occipital cortex in 10–16-month-old hemizygotes | Reports of impaired spatial learning, working, memory and contextual fear conditioning at <6 months | |
| APPSwe/PSEN1dE9 (Jankowsky et al. | Aβ deposits can be found by 6 months | Significant gliosis by 6 months, especially in areas around plaques | Impairment in the Morris water maze at 12 months | |
| 5xFAD (Oakley et al. | Amyloid deposition starts at 1.5 months and is particularly high in subiculum and deep cortical layers. Aβ42 accumulates intraneuronally in an aggregated form within the soma and neurites starting at 1.5 months | Gliosis starts since 2 months of age and is proportional to Aβ42 levels and amyloid deposition. The number of activated astrocytes and microglia increases with age paralleling the age-related rise in amyloid burden | Impaired spatial memory as measured by the Y-maze test observed at 4–5 months | |
| Aβ and tau | 3xTg (Oddo et al. | Extracellular Aβ deposits observed at 6 months in the frontal cortex | Increased astrocyte and microglial density observed at 7 months of age | Cognitive impairment develops from 4 months of age and correlates with the accumulation of intraneuronal Aβ in the hippocampus and amygdala, although plaques and tangles are not apparent at this age |
| APPSweDI/NOS2−/− (Colton et al. | Increased Aβ42/40 ratio, as well as hyperphosphorylated and aggregated tau | Increased microglial density in brain areas associated with plaques and astrogliosis | Severe memory impairment |
Comparison of ageing-related differences between mice and humans
| Organism | Human | Mouse |
|---|---|---|
| Life span | Life expectancy is at least 81 years in several countries, with an increase by 2–3 months every year without any indication of a slow-down (Global Burden of Disease Study | Life span between 2–3 years depending on strain (Yuan et al. |
| Brain volume loss | Significant brain volume loss associated both with normal and pathological ageing, although it is exacerbated in pathological conditions (Schuff et al. | Total brain size increases with age in wild-type mice (Maheswaran et al. |
| Microglial morphology | Primed microglia with greater immunoreactivity | Thickening and a deramification of microglial processes, with hypertrophy of the cell body (Hart et al. |
| Inflammatory profile | Increased expression of IL-1, IL6, TNF-α, TGFβ, chemokines, complement proteins, and TLRs (Lopez-Gonzalez et al. | Increased expression of cytokines and inflammatory mediators, in a pattern very similar to the human (Lopez-Gonzalez et al. |