| Literature DB >> 28637503 |
Johannes Steffen1, Markus Krohn2, Christina Schwitlick1, Thomas Brüning2, Kristin Paarmann2, Claus U Pietrzik3, Henrik Biverstål4, Baiba Jansone5, Oliver Langer6,7, Jens Pahnke8,9,10.
Abstract
Amyloid-β (Aβ) deposition is one of the hallmarks of the amyloid hypothesis in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Mouse models using APP-transgene overexpression to generate amyloid plaques have shown to model only certain parts of the disease. The extent to which the data from mice can be transferred to man remains controversial. Several studies have shown convincing treatment results in reducing Aβ and enhancing cognition in mice but failed totally in human. One model-dependent factor has so far been almost completely neglected: the endogenous expression of mouse APP and its effects on the transgenic models and the readout for therapeutic approaches.Here, we report that hAPP-transgenic models of amyloidosis devoid of endogenous mouse APP expression (mAPP-knockout / mAPPko) show increased amounts and higher speed of Aβ deposition than controls with mAPP. The number of senile plaques and the level of aggregated hAβ were elevated in mAPPko mice, while the deposition in cortical blood vessels was delayed, indicating an alteration in the general aggregation propensity of hAβ together with endogenous mAβ. Furthermore, the cellular response to Aβ deposition was modulated: mAPPko mice developed a pronounced and age-dependent astrogliosis, while microglial association to amyloid plaques was diminished. The expression of human and murine aggregation-prone proteins with differing amino acid sequences within the same mouse model might not only alter the extent of deposition but also modulate the route of pathogenesis, and thus, decisively influence the study outcome, especially in translational research.Entities:
Keywords: Abeta; Alzheimer’s disease; Amyloid precursor protein; Amyloidosis; Murine amyloid-beta; Transgenic mice
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28637503 PMCID: PMC5480119 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-017-0448-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1Deposition of β-amyloid is altered upon knockout of murine APP (mAPP0/0). Representative micrographs of cortical brain sections from 150 d old a mAPP0/0 and b mAPP+/+ mice, immunostained for hAβ and contrasted with haematoxylin illustrate the elevated deposition of human Aβ in murine APP-deficient mice. Semi-automatic analysis confirmed the increase in c amount of cortical plaques, d mean size of plaques and e plaque load (Aβ-positive cortical area). Immunoassays revealed f consistently higher levels of deposited (guanidine soluble) Aβ in mAPP0/0 mice, while g soluble (carbonate soluble) Aβ was only significantly changed at 125 d. In contrast to parenchyma, h deposition in leptomeningeal vessels was delayed in murine APP-deficient mice. (Scale bar: 500 μm; * p ≤ 0.05; n ≥ 7)
Fig. 2Altered cellular response in murine APP-deficient mice. Cortical brain sections were immunostained for Aβ and IBA1 (a, b, 150 d) or GFAP (c, d, 200 d) and contrasted using haematoxylin. Representative micrographs emphasize the impaired microglial response and pronounced astrogliosis in mAPP0/0 mice a, c compared to mAPP+/+ animals b, d. While the total area of microglial cells (IBA1+) was stable upon knockout of murine APP e, microglial coverage of plaques f and the total area of plaque associated microglial cells (G) were reduced. By contrast, a pronounced and age-dependent astrogliosis developed in mAPP0/0 mice (C, D, H). (Scale bars: 250 μm in overview, 50 μm in enlargements; * for p ≤ 0.05; n ≥ 7)
Fig. 3Expression levels of APP- and Aβ-cleaving enzymes remain unchanged. Western blots of the most relevant α- and β-secretases (ADAM10 and BACE1) revealed an age- and genotype independent expression. Levels of Aβ-degrading IDE were likewise unchanged. (β-actin was used as loading control)
Fig. 4Neuronal density is unchanged in murine APP-deficient mice. Representative brain sections immunostained for NeuN (neuronal nuclei) and contrasted using haematoxylin revealed no significant differences in neuronal density between mAPP0/0 a and mAPP+/+ mice b at 150 d. Semi-automatic evaluation of digitised slides confirmed similar density of neurons in both groups c. (Scale bar: 250 μm; unpaired t-test with Welch’s correction displayed no significant differences; n ≥ 10)
Fig. 5Expression levels of major caspases remained unchanged. Western blot analysis indicated neither age- nor genotype-dependent differences between in expression levels of caspase-3 and -9. (β-actin was used as loading control)