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Cognitive Deficits and Disruption of Neurogenesis in a Mouse Model of Apolipoprotein E4 Domain Interaction
Authors:Samuel O. Adeosun  Xu Hou  Baoying Zheng  Craig Stockmeier  Xiaoming Ou  Ian Paul  Thomas Mosley  Karl Weisgraber  Jun Ming Wang
Affiliation:From the §Department of Pathology.;The Graduate Program in Neuroscience.;Psychiatry and Human Behavior.;‡‡Pharmacology and Toxicology, and ;Memory Impairment and Neurodegenerative Dementia Center, University Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi 39216 and ;**Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease, University of California, San Francisco, California 94141-9100
Abstract:Apolipoprotein E4 (apoE4) allele is the major genetic risk factor for sporadic Alzheimer disease (AD) due to the higher prevalence and earlier onset of AD in apoE4 carriers. Accumulating data suggest that the interaction between the N- and the C-terminal domains in the protein may be the main pathologic feature of apoE4. To test this hypothesis, we used Arg-61 mice, a model of apoE4 domain interaction, by introducing the domain interaction feature of human apoE4 into native mouse apoE. We carried out hippocampus-dependent learning and memory tests and related cellular and molecular assays on 12- and 3-month-old Arg-61 and age-matched background C57BL/6J mice. Learning and memory task performance were impaired in Arg-61 mice at both old and young ages compared with C57BL/6J mice. Surprisingly, young Arg-61 mice had more mitotic doublecortin-positive cells in the subgranular zone; mRNA levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and TrkB were also higher in 3-month-old Arg-61 hippocampus compared with C57BL/6J mice. These early-age neurotrophic and neurogenic (proliferative) effects in the Arg-61 mouse may be an inadequate compensatory but eventually detrimental attempt by the system to “repair” itself. This is supported by the higher cleaved caspase-3 levels in the young animals that not only persisted, but increased in old age, and the lower levels of doublecortin at old age in the hippocampus of Arg-61 mice. These results are consistent with human apoE4-dependent cognitive and neuro-pathologic changes, supporting the principal role of domain interaction in the pathologic effect of apoE4. Domain interaction is, therefore, a viable therapeutic/prophylactic target for cognitive impairment and AD in apoE4 subjects.
Keywords:Alzheimer Disease   ApoE   Apoptosis   BDNF   Neurogenesis   Protein Domains   Antagonistic Pleiotropy   Doublecortin   Learning and Memory
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