| Literature DB >> 30533414 |
Caghan Kizil1,2, Prabesh Bhattarai1,2.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disease and is the leading form of dementia. AD entails chronic inflammation, impaired synaptic integrity and reduced neurogenesis. The clinical and molecular onsets of the disease do not temporally overlap and the initiation phase of the cellular changes might start with a complex causativeness between chronic inflammation, reduced neural stem cell plasticity and neurogenesis. Although the immune and neuronal aspects in AD are well studied, the neural stem cell-related features are far less investigated. An intriguing question is, therefore, whether a stem cell can ever be made proliferative and neurogenic during the prevalent AD in the brain. Recent findings affirm this hypothesis and thus a plausible way to circumvent the AD phenotypes could be to mobilize the endogenous stem cells by enhancing their proliferative and neurogenic capacity as well as to provide the newborn neurons the potential to survive and integrate into the existing circuitry. To address these questions, zebrafish offers unprecedented information and tools, which can be effectively translated into mammalian experimental systems.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; neural stem/progenitor cells; neurogenesis; regeneration; zebrafish
Year: 2018 PMID: 30533414 PMCID: PMC6265475 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2018.00159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1A simplified comparison of the effects of Alzheimer’s disease on neural stem cell plasticity in mouse and zebrafish. In mouse, Amyloid deposition initiates pro-inflammatory response that potentiates Amyloid toxicity that impairs neural stem cell proliferation, neurogenesis, neuronal maturation, and synaptic integrity. This chronic inflammation suppresses anti-inflammatory factor Interleukin-4, which is beneficial for neuronal survival and synaptic integrity. In zebrafish, although Amyloid deposition follows a toxicity cascade similar to that of the mouse (activation of pro-inflammatory response and hampered synaptic integrity), Amyloid also leads to induction of anti-inflammatory factor Interleukin-4, which enhances neural stem cell proliferation, neurogenesis, and neuronal maturation. The effects of Interleukin-4 counteracts synaptic degeneration and reduced neural stem cell plasticity.
Comparison of zebrafish and rodent models in Alzheimer’s disease research.
| Zebrafish | Rodents |
|---|---|
| Amyloid-mediated neuronal death | No neuronal death |
| Neuroregenerative capacity | No neuroregenerative capacity |
| Stem cell plasticity for neurogenesis | Stem cells reduce plasticity and neurogenesis |
| Cost efficient generation and maintenance | Expensive generation and maintenance |
| High number of animals testable | Limited number of animals testable |
| 3R strategies developed | 3R strategies to be developed |
| Synaptic degeneration | Synaptic degeneration |
| Cognitive decline with Amyloidosis | Cognitive decline with Amyloidosis |
| Genetic tools available | Genetic tools available |
| Does not reflect the entire biology of the human disease | Does not reflect the entire biology of the human disease |
| Non-mammalian physiology | Mammalian physiology |
| Need for adaptation to preclinical studies | Suitable for preclinical studies |
| Limited number of models expressing disease-related proteins | Variety of models expressing disease-related proteins |