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Hippocampal Extracellular Matrix Levels and Stochasticity in Synaptic Protein Expression Increase with Age and Are Associated with Age-dependent Cognitive Decline
Authors:Marlene J. Végh  Antonio Rausell  Maarten Loos  Céline M. Heldring  Wiktor Jurkowski  Pim van Nierop  Iryna Paliukhovich  Ka Wan Li  Antonio del Sol  August B. Smit  Sabine Spijker  Ronald E. van Kesteren
Affiliation:From the ‡Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research, Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam, VU University, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands; ;§Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, 7 Avenue des Hauts Fourneaux, L-4362 Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg; ;¶Sylics (Synaptologics BV), PO Box 71033, 1008BA Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:Age-related cognitive decline is a serious health concern in our aging society. Decreased cognitive function observed during healthy brain aging is most likely caused by changes in brain connectivity and synaptic dysfunction in particular brain regions. Here we show that aged C57BL/6J wild-type mice have hippocampus-dependent spatial memory impairments. To identify the molecular mechanisms that are relevant to these memory deficits, we investigated the temporal profile of mouse hippocampal synaptic proteome changes at 20, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100 weeks of age. Extracellular matrix proteins were the only group of proteins that showed robust and progressive up-regulation over time. This was confirmed by immunoblotting and histochemical analysis, which indicated that the increased levels of hippocampal extracellular matrix might limit synaptic plasticity as a potential cause of age-related cognitive decline. In addition, we observed that stochasticity in synaptic protein expression increased with age, in particular for proteins that were previously linked with various neurodegenerative diseases, whereas low variance in expression was observed for proteins that play a basal role in neuronal function and synaptic neurotransmission. Together, our findings show that both specific changes and increased variance in synaptic protein expression are associated with aging and may underlie reduced synaptic plasticity and impaired cognitive performance in old age.As the proportion of aged individuals in our population continues to grow, we are faced with an increase in age-related health problems. Brain aging invariably leads to functional decline and impairments in cognitive function and motor skills, which can seriously affect quality of life. A better understanding of the neurobiological mechanisms underlying age-related cognitive decline is crucial to facilitate maintenance of cognitive health in the elderly and to reveal potential causes of highly prevalent age-related forms of dementia, in particular Alzheimer disease, in which cognitive decline is severely impaired by yet unknown mechanisms.Several studies showed that normal brain aging is associated with subtle morphological and functional alterations in specific neuronal circuits (1, 2) and that reduced cognitive function with increasing age is likely due to synaptic dysfunction (3). Increasing evidence supports the idea that alterations in hippocampal activity are correlated with deficits in learning and memory in healthy aging humans (4, 5). In addition, rodent models of healthy aging demonstrate strong correlations between impaired performance in learning and memory tests and disturbed hippocampal network activity (6, 7). Electrophysiological studies provide additional evidence that age-related disturbances in the hippocampus involve changes in the principal cellular features of learning and memory, synaptic long-term potentiation and long-term depression (8, 9). Together, these observations suggest that a decline in hippocampal synaptic efficacy and plasticity plays a critical role in age-dependent cognitive impairment.Aging is also the primary risk factor for Alzheimer disease, which clinically manifests as severe and accelerated age-dependent cognitive decline (10). Genetic causes of familial early-onset Alzheimer disease all point to a key role in disease etiology for increased brain levels of the protein amyloid-β (11). Familial Alzheimer disease, however, is rare, and it is likely that increased amyloid-β levels in sporadic Alzheimer disease result from age-dependent and/or genetically determined alterations in the expression of other genes or proteins (12, 13). Thus, the identification of molecular mechanisms of normal brain aging might also contribute to our understanding of cognitive decline under pathological conditions, in particular in Alzheimer disease.Although the exact mechanisms underlying brain aging remain to be fully determined, they likely include changes at the molecular, cellular, and neuronal-network levels. In particular, characterization of alterations in the molecular composition and dynamics of hippocampal synapses could potentially reveal important aspects of the underlying mechanisms of brain aging. Age-related changes in global hippocampal gene and protein expression have been investigated previously (14, 15), but these studies were not geared to identify the specific synaptic molecular substrates of brain aging. Here, we made use of iTRAQ1 technology and high-coverage mass spectrometry to study the effects of aging on the proteomic composition of mouse hippocampal synaptosomes. We investigated the synaptic proteomes of individual mice at 20, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100 weeks of age. Our findings show that both specific changes and increased variance in synaptic protein expression are associated with age-related cognitive decline.
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