| Literature DB >> 29273078 |
Joanna L Jankowsky1,2,3,4,5, Hui Zheng6,7,8,9.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is behaviorally identified by progressive memory impairment and pathologically characterized by the triad of β-amyloid plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and neurodegeneration. Genetic mutations and risk factors have been identified that are either causal or modify the disease progression. These genetic and pathological features serve as basis for the creation and validation of mouse models of AD. Efforts made in the past quarter-century have produced over 100 genetically engineered mouse lines that recapitulate some aspects of AD clinicopathology. These models have been valuable resources for understanding genetic interactions that contribute to disease and cellular reactions that are engaged in response. Here we focus on mouse models that have been widely used stalwarts of the field or that are recently developed bellwethers of the future. Rather than providing a summary of each model, we endeavor to compare and contrast the genetic approaches employed and to discuss their respective advantages and limitations. We offer a critical account of the variables which may contribute to inconsistent findings and the factors that should be considered when choosing a model and interpreting the results. We hope to present an insightful review of current AD mouse models and to provide a practical guide for selecting models best matched to the experimental question at hand.Entities:
Keywords: APP; Amyloid precursor protein; ApoE; Apolipoprotein E; Aβ; Knock-in; Knockout; MAPT; TREM2; Tau; Transgenic mouse
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29273078 PMCID: PMC5741956 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-017-0231-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Fig. 1Diagram of APP illustrating nine FAD mutations that have been incorporated into mouse models. The Aβ domain is highlighted in red, with the β- and γ-cleavage sites identified at residues 671 and 714, respectively, using the numbering convention for full-length 770 amino acid protein. The amino acid sequence of Aβ is outlined in red, with the positions of several commonly used FAD mutations and their amino acid substitutions shown (in bold) alongside the geographic name identifying each variant. Italic residues indicate the three sites at which the Aβ sequence diverges between human and mouse (human is shown). Swe, Swedish; Arc, Arctic; Aus, Austrian; Lon, London; Ind, Indiana; Ibe, Iberian; Flo, Florida
Standard Transgenic Lines for APP, APP + PS1, and Tau
| Model | Transgene | Transgenic promoter | Availability | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| PDAPP | huAPP770 (Ind) minigene (cDNA + introns 6–8) |
| Novartis | [ |
| Tg2576 | huAPP695 (Swe) | hamster | Taconic, Charles River | [ |
| C3–3 | mo/huAPP695 (Swe) | mouse | MMRRC 34828-JAX | [ |
| APP23 | huAPP751 (Swe) | mouse | JAX 030504 | [ |
| J20 | huAPP770 (Swe/Ind) minigene (cDNA + introns 6–8) |
| MMRRC 34836-JAX | [ |
| TgCRND8 | huAPP695 (Swe/Ind) | hamster | Peter St. George-Hyslop | [ |
| Tg-SwDI | huAPP770 (Swe/Dutch/Iowa) | mouse | MMRRC 34843-JAX | [ |
|
| ||||
| APP/PS1 Line 85 | mo/huAPP695 (Swe); Tg huPSEN1 (ΔE9) | mouse | MMRRC 34832-JAX, 34,829-JAX | [ |
| APPPS1 | huAPP695 (Swe); huPSEN1 (L166P) | mouse | Mathias Jucker | [ |
| 5XFAD Tg6799 | huAPP695 (Swe/Flo/Lon); huPSEN1 (M146 L/L286 V) | mouse | MMRRC 34840-JAX, 34,848-JAX | [ |
|
| ||||
| Tau Tg Line 43 | huMAPT3R0N (wt) | mouse | JAX 003741 | [ |
| JNPL3 | huMAPT4R0N (P301L) | mouse | Taconic | [ |
| hTau.P301S | huMAPT4R0N (P301S) | mouse | Michel Goedert | [ |
| PS19 | huMAPT4R1N (P301S) | mouse | JAX 008169 | [ |
|
| ||||
| 3xTg-AD | huAPP695 (Swe); MAPT4R0N (P301L); | mouse | MMRRC 34830-JAX | [ |
Tables 1-4: Refer to Fig. 1 for illustration of APP mutations.
Controllable transgenic lines for APP and Tau
| Model | Transgene | Promoter | Availability | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| tetO-APP Lines 102 and 107 | mo/huAPP695 (Swe/Ind) | TetO (first generation TRE from pTet-Splice) | MMRRC 34845-JAX, 34846-JAX | [ |
| rTg4510 | huMAPT4R0N (P301L) | TRE (first generation TRE from pTRE) | JAX 015815, 024854 | [ |
| rTg21221 | huMAPT4R0N (wt) | TRE (first generation TRE from pTRE) | Karen Ashe | [ |
| rTg9191 | huAPP695 (Swe/Lon) | TRE (first generation TRE from pTRE) | Karen Ashe | [ |
| hTau-A152T Line L1 | huMAPT4R1N (A152T) | TRE-Tight (second generation TRE) | JAX 028979 | [ |
| hTau-WT Line L32 | huMAPT4R1N (wt) | TRE-Tight (second generation TRE) | JAX 029269 | [ |
|
| ||||
| Camk2a-tTA Line B | tTA (first generation) | mo | JAX 007004, 003010 | [ |
| EC-tTA | tTA2 (second generation) |
| MMRRC 031779-MU | [ |
|
| tTA (first generation) | human | JAX 025397 | [ |
| ROSA:LNL:tTA | optimized/modified tTA (mtTA) | ROSA26-LNL (Cre-dependent)a | JAX 011008 | [ |
| ROSA26-ZtTA | tTA (first generation) | ROSA26-CAG-LβL (Cre-dependent)b | JAX 012266 (see also 024107) | [ |
aLNL: loxP-(neomycin/poly A)-loxP
bLβL: loxP-(β-geo (lacZ-neomycin phosphotransferase fusion)/3x poly A-loxP
Tables 1-–4: Refer to Fig. 1 for illustration of APP mutations.
Lines with physiological expression of APP, PS1, and Tau
| Model | Allele | Targeting approach | Availability | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| APPNLh | endogenous mouse | Knock-in | NA | [ |
| APP R1.40 | complete human genomic | YAC transgenic | MMRRC 34831-JAX | [ |
| APPSL | mouse/human | Knock-in | NA | [ |
| APPDSL | endogenous mouse | Knock-in | Hui Zheng | [ |
| APPNL, APPNLF, and APPNLGF | endogenous mouse | Knock-in | Takaomi Saido | [ |
| PS1M146V | endogenous mouse | Knock-in | JAX 004193 | [ |
| PS1 KI | endogenous mouse | Knock-in | NA | [ |
| htau | complete human genomic | PAC transgenic x | JAX 005491 | [ |
Tables 1-4: Refer to Fig. 1 for illustration of APP mutations
Viral transgenic lines for APP and Tau
| Transgene | Promoter | Viral packaging | Host | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| BRI-Aβ40 BRI-Aβ42 | CBA | AAV1 | adult rat | [ |
| huAPP695 (Swe/Lon/Aus) |
| AAV (serotype not stated) | adult mouse | [ |
|
| ||||
| hu | CAG | AAV2 | adult rat | [ |
| hu | mouse | lentivirus | adult mouse | [ |
| hu | CMV | AAV2 | adult mouse | [ |
| hu | human | AAV1 | adult mouse | [ |
| hu | CMV | lentivirus | adult rat | [ |
| hu | human | AAV9 | adult mouse | [ |
| hu | mouse | AAV6 | adult mouse | [ |
|
| ||||
| hu | CAG | AAV1 | neonatal mouse | [ |
| hu | CAG | AAV1 | neonatal mouse | [ |
CAG cytomegalovirus immediate early enhancer combined with the chicken β actin promoter [209]
CBA chicken β-actin
CMV cytomegalovirus
Tables 1-4: Refer to Fig. 1 for illustration of APP mutations.
APOE and TREM2 Models
| Model | Allele | Targeting approach | Availability | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| GFAP-ApoE3 Line 37, GFAP-ApoE4, Line 1 | hu | Transgenic, hu | JAX 004633, 004631 | [ |
| ApoE2, E3, E4 KI | hu | Targeted insertion of | NA | [ |
| ApoE KO |
| Targeted neo insertion replacing part of | JAX 002052; 014556 | [ |
| APOE*3, E*4 KI | hu | Targeted replacement of | JAX 027894 (E4) JAX 029018 (E3) | NA |
| APOE2, E3, E4 Targeted replacement | hu | Targeted replacement of | Taconic | [ |
|
| ||||
| TREM2 KO |
| Targeted lacZ/neo replacement of TREM2 exons 2–4 | UCD/KOMP VG10093 | [ |
| TREM2−/− |
| Targeted deletion TREM2 exons 3–4 | Marco Colonna | [ |
| TREM2 KO |
| CRISPR/Cas9 | JAX 027197 | NA |
| TREM2 R47H KI | endogenous mouse | CRISPR/Cas9 | JAX 027918 | NA |
| TREM2 Y38C KI | endogenous mouse | CRISPR/Cas9 | JAX 029725 | NA |
| TREM2 p.T66 M | endogenous mouse | CRISPR/Cas9 | Christian Haass | [ |
| TREM2 flox |
| Targeted insertion | JAX 029853 | NA |
Quick guide to the pros and cons of commonly used AD mouse models
| Model | Main features | Pros | Cons | Examples of use in AD research |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tg2576 | mid-life amyloid pathology (10–14 mo) | well-characterized, maintains aging feature of AD | high lethality on C57 background, Tg male aggressive and needs to be single-housed | [ |
| APP/PS1 | early-onset (~6 mo) amyloid pathology | well-characterized, co-integrated transgenes breed as a single allele | like other co-integrated models, cannot control for independent transgene effects | [ |
| 5XFAD | juvenile-onset amyloid pathology (~3 mo) | rapid onset phenotype, co-integrated transgenes breed as a single allele | non-physiological combination of FAD mutations, marked intracellular Aβ accumulation | [ |
| 3xTg-AD | early- to mid-life amyloid pathology plus hyperphosphorylated tau | captures both Aβ and phospho-tau features of AD | variable pathology between colonies and sexes, genetic drift has been observed | [ |
| rTg4510 | early-onset neurofibrillary tangles (~5–6 mo), severe neurodegeneration | temporally controllable, rapid onset phenotype, develops true NFT pathology, well-characterized | breeding complicated by need for two independent transgenes, 13-fold overexpression of tau protein | [ |
| PS19 | mid-life neurofibrillary tangles (6–9 mo), marked neurodegeneration | single-transgenic model, mid-life onset allows use in experiments expected to either delay or exacerbate pathology | transgene expression in spinal cord causes paralysis by mid-life | [ |
| APPNLF | mid-life amyloid pathology (~12 mo for homozygote, but note >24 mo for heterozygote allele) | endogenous APP level, native human Aβ sequence | limited cognitive impairment, requires homozygous allele for mid-life onset | [ |
| APPNLGF | juvenile-onset amyloid pathology (~3–4 mo for homozygote, ~9 mo for heterozygote) | endogenous APP level, can be used as heterozygote | non-native Aβ sequence, mild cognitive phenotype | [ |
| hTau | mid-life hyperphosphorylated tau (~6 mo) | near-endogenous level expression of all 6 human wild-type tau isoforms | complicated breeding of transgene on null background, mild phenotype variable between colonies | [ |
| APOE2, E3, E4 Targeted replacement | allele-specific effects on Aβ, tau, brain atrophy, and neuroinflammation; both central and peripheral functions influenced by allele | widely-studied, expressed at endogenous levels, mouse ApoE deleted | cannot distinguish central vs. peripheral effects; available through Taconic but with restrictions on usage | [ |