First effects of rising amyloid-β in transgenic mouse brain: synaptic transmission and gene expression

May 19, 2015Brain : a journal of neurology

Early effects of increasing amyloid-beta on brain communication and gene activity in genetically modified mice

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Abstract

In a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease, initial detectable amyloid-β levels occur weeks before plaque deposition is observed.

  • Several amyloid-β peptides, including amyloid-β40, amyloid-β38, and amyloid-β42, were detected in the hippocampus during the third postnatal week with an intensity ratio of 6:3:2.
  • By 2 months, amyloid-β levels increased by only 50%, yet synaptic current changes were detectable compared to wild-type mice.
  • Between 2 and 4 months, amyloid-β40 levels rose by approximately 7-fold, while amyloid-β42 levels increased by 25-fold, shifting the amyloid-β42:amyloid-β40 ratio to 1:1.
  • Plaque deposition was only detectable at 4 months and in some mice, although synaptic changes were evident in all hippocampal fields.
  • Significant alterations in gene expression affecting synaptic genes were observed between 2-4 months, often only reaching significance by 4 months.

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