| Literature DB >> 34162463 |
Gowoon Son1, Ali Jahanshahi2, Seung-Jun Yoo3, Jackson T Boonstra2, David A Hopkins4, Harry W M Steinbusch5, Cheil Moon6.
Abstract
Olfactory neuropathology is a cause of olfactory loss in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Olfactory dysfunction is also associated with memory and cognitive dysfunction and is an incidental finding of AD dementia. Here we review neuropathological research on the olfactory system in AD, considering both structural and functional evidence. Experimental and clinical findings identify olfactory dysfunction as an early indicator of AD. In keeping with this, amyloid-β production and neuroinflammation are related to underlying causes of impaired olfaction. Notably, physiological features of the spatial map in the olfactory system suggest the evidence of ongoing neurodegeneration. Our aim in this review is to examine olfactory pathology findings essential to identifying mechanisms of olfactory dysfunction in the development of AD in hopes of supporting investigations leading towards revealing potential diagnostic methods and causes of early pathogenesis in the olfactory system. [BMB Reports 2021; 54(6): 295-304].Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34162463 PMCID: PMC8249876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMB Rep ISSN: 1976-6696 Impact factor: 4.778
Pathological alterations in the olfactory system of patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD)
| Findings | Methods | Clinical stage | Measured AD pathology | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reduced OB volume and white matter of the olfactory tract | MRI, DTI 3T-MRI | aMCI | n/a | ( |
| β1-42, p-tau, and astrogliosis in the glomerular layer, anterior olfactory nucleus, olfactory tubercle | IHC | MCI, moderate-AD, severe-AD | β1-42, p-tau, astrogliosis | ( |
| β-amyloid aggregates, PHF-tau, and α-synuclein in the anterior olfactory nucleus | IHC | n/a | β-amyloid, PHF-tau,α-synuclein | ( |
| β-amyloid, tau in the piriform cortex | IHC | AD | β-amyloid, tau | ( |
| Deficit in olfactory identification | Olfactory identification test, DTI 3T-MRI | aMCI, AD, MCI-DLB, MCI-AD | Lewy body | ( |
| Deficit in olfactory identification differentiated AD from aging | Olfactory identification test | aMCI, AD, healthy aging | n/a | ( |
| Reduced ability to identify a specific subset of smell | Olfactory identification test | AD | n/a | ( |
| Impaired olfactory identification (proportional to cognitive impairment in aMCI) | Olfactory identification test | aMCI,non-aMCI | n/a | ( |
| Implication: damaged OSNs and olfactory malfunction following exposure to air-pollutants | Statistics, epidemiology | n/a | n/a | ( |
| One-fifth of allergic and chronic rhinitis patients develop AD | Medical examination, IgE assay | Allergic diseases with AD | Inflammation | ( |
| β-amyloid aggregates, PHF-tau, and α-synuclein in the OE | IHC | AD, OND | β-amyloid, PHF-tau,α-synuclein | ( |
| β-amyloid in nasal secretions | WB | AD, OND | β-amyloid | ( |
| β-amyloid in nasal discharge (correlated with cognitive decline) | LC/MS | Probable AD (mild, moderate AD) | β-amyloid (Aβ*56, AβO) | ( |
| apoE4 correlated with odor identification deficits | Odor threshold test, olfactory identification test | n/a | apoE4 | ( |
OB: olfactory bulb, MRI: magnetic resonance imaging, DTI-3T: 3.0 Tesla diffusion tensor imaging, aMCI: amnestic mild cognitive impairment, AD: Alzheimer’s disease, n/a: non-applicable, IHC: immunohistochemistry, DLB: dementia with Lewy body, OSN: olfactory sensory neuron, OE: olfactory epithelium, OND: other neurodegenerative disease, PHF: paired helical filament.
Pathological alterations in the olfactory system in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)
| Findings | Methods | Strain (age) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| - Decreased OE thickness | IHC, TUNEL assay, EM | Tg2576 (6, 12 M) | ( |
| - Increased populations of TUNEL (+) cell | |||
| - Decreased in number and length of dendritic spines | |||
| - Deficit in olfactory behavior and β-amyloid deposition | |||
| - Increased latency in finding buried food, reduced peanut butter preference | |||
| - Distorted ultrastructure and subcellular components in the OE | ELISA, IHC, PCR, EM, BrdU assay | hAPP (3 w) | ( |
| - Decreased mature OSNs | |||
| - Earlier β-amyloid deposition in the olfactory system than brain region | IHC, Thio-S staining | Tg2576 (3, 6, 16, 21M) | ( |
| - Region specific APP processing | WB, IHC, ISH | Tg2576 (10M), BACE null | ( |
| - Restricted expression of β-secretase only in the olfactory glomerulus in the OB | |||
| - Reduced response to odorants (only specific odorant) | Odor detection test, calcium imaging, IHC, TUNEL assay | Tg6799 (3M) | ( |
| - Region specific calcium inactivation of OSN correlated with Region specific β-amyloid deposition | |||
| - Deficits of turnover ratio of OE | |||
| - Damaged OSNs and olfactory malfunction following exposure to air-pollutant nanoparticles | IHC, PCR, WB, nitrite assay | C57BL6 (3M), Fischer 344 rats (12w) | ( |
| - Aberrant OSNs projection to the glomeruli | IHC, ISH, AAV modulation, | Tg2576 (13, 24M) | ( |
| - Higher expressions levels and activity of γ-secretase in the OE | IHC, TUNEL assay, EM | Tg2576 (10M), | ( |
| - β-amyloid (Aβ*56) accumulates more quickly in the OE | |||
| - Correlation between deficit of olfactory habituation and spatial-temporal β-amyloid deposition | Odor cross-habituation test | Tg2576 (3, 6, 16, 21M) | ( |
| - Deficit in odor investigation and habituation | |||
| - Altered the OSN connectivity by inducing human β-amyloid | IHC, TMT assay, hidden food assay | CORMAP mouse, Tg2576 (13, 24M) | ( |
| - Decreased response to aversive odor in induced human β-amyloid condition | |||
| - Injected β-amyloid in the OB transferring to other brain region | β-amyloid injection, IHC, TUNEL, WB | C57BL6 (7-8w) | ( |
OE: olfactory epithelium, TUNEL (+): terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling-positive, IHC: immunohistochemistry, EM: electric microscopy, Tg: transgenic mouse, M: months, OSN: olfactory sensory neuron, ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, PCR: polymerase chain reaction, BrdU: 5-bromodeo-2-deoxyuridine, hAPP: human amyloid precursor protein, w: weeks, OB: olfactory bulb, WB: western blot, ISH: in situ hybridization, BACE: β-site amyloid cleavage enzyme, AAV: Adeno-associated virus, TMT: 2,3,5-Trimethyl-3-thiazoline, CORMAP: Conditional, Olfactory Sensory Neuron-Restricted Mosaic expression of APPsw and PLAP.
Fig. 1Scheme of the olfactory system. (Left) Scheme of olfactory sensory neuron projections. Olfactory sensory neurons transduce odor information via electrical signals that trigger neurotransmitter release in the olfactory bulb. Mucus secreted by Bowman’s glands and sustentacular cells protect the olfactory epithelium’s structure and maintain homeostasis. (Right) Scheme of the olfactory system according to the process of olfaction.
Fig. 2Scheme of the turnover of olfactory sensory neurons. Once the olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) degenerate in the lifetime, new OSNs originate from progenitor cells located in the basal layer that proliferate and send their axons to the olfactory bulb.
Fig. 3Scheme of the spatially conserved map in the mouse olfactory system. The zonal organization, endoturbinates-dorsal glome-rulus axis (yellow), and ectoturbinates-ventral glomerulus axis (purple). The two drawings in yellow and purple are representations of two olfactory sensory neurons, with the colors emphasizing the regional topography of sensory inputs to the olfactory bulb.