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Publication : Loss of RBPj in postnatal excitatory neurons does not cause neurodegeneration or memory impairments in aged mice.

First Author  Sato C Year  2012
Journal  PLoS One Volume  7
Issue  10 Pages  e48180
PubMed ID  23110206 Mgi Jnum  J:192302
Mgi Id  MGI:5464272 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0048180
Citation  Sato C, et al. (2012) Loss of RBPj in postnatal excitatory neurons does not cause neurodegeneration or memory impairments in aged mice. PLoS One 7(10):e48180
abstractText  Previous studies suggest that loss of gamma-secretase activity in postnatal mouse brains causes age-dependent memory impairment and neurodegeneration. Due to the diverse array of gamma-secretase substrates, it remains to be demonstrated whether loss of cleavage of any specific substrate(s) is responsible for these defects. The bulk of the phenotypes observed in mammals deficient for gamma-secretase or exposed to gamma-secretase inhibitors are caused by the loss of Notch receptor proteolysis. Accordingly, inhibition of Notch signaling is the main cause for untoward effects for gamma-secretase inhibitors as therapeutics for Alzheimer's disease. Therefore, we wished to determine if loss of canonical Notch signaling is responsible for the age-dependent neurodegeneration observed upon gamma-secrectase deficiency in the mouse brain. We generated postnatal forebrain-specific RBPj conditional knockout (cKO) mice using the CamKII-Cre driver and examined behavior and brain pathology in 12-18 month old animals. Since all four mammalian Notch receptor homologues signal via this DNA binding protein, these mice lack canonical Notch signaling. We found that loss of RBPj in mature excitatory neurons was well tolerated, with no evidence for neurodegeneration or of learning and memory impairment in mice aged up to 18 months. The only phenotypic deficit we observed in the RBPj-deficient mice was a subtle abnormality in olfactory preferences, particularly in females. We conclude that the loss of canonical Notch signaling through the four receptors is not responsible for age-dependent neurodegeneration or learning and memory deficits seen in gamma-secretase deficient mice.
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