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Publication : AβPP/PS1 Transgenic Mice Show Sex Differences in the Cerebellum Associated with Aging.

First Author  Ordoñez-Gutierrez L Year  2016
Journal  J Alzheimers Dis Volume  54
Issue  2 Pages  645-56
PubMed ID  27567877 Mgi Jnum  J:234618
Mgi Id  MGI:5790474 Doi  10.3233/JAD-160572
Citation  Ordonez-Gutierrez L, et al. (2016) AbetaPP/PS1 Transgenic Mice Show Sex Differences in the Cerebellum Associated with Aging. J Alzheimers Dis 54(2):645-56
abstractText  Cerebellar pathology has been related to presenilin 1 mutations in certain pedigrees of familial Alzheimer's disease. However, cerebellum tissue has not been intensively analyzed in transgenic models of mutant presenilins. Furthermore, the effect of the sex of the mice was not systematically analyzed, despite the fact that important gender differences in the evolution of the disease in the human population have been described. We analyzed whether the progression of amyloidosis in a double transgenic mouse, AbetaPP/PS1, is susceptible to aging and differentially affects males and females. The accumulation of amyloid in the cerebellum differentially affects males and females of the AbetaPP/PS1 transgenic line, which was found to be ten-fold higher in 15-month-old females. Amyloid-beta accumulation was more evident in the molecular layer of the cerebellum, but glia reaction was only observed in the granular layer of the older mice. The sex divergence was also observed in other neuronal, survival, and autophagic markers. The cerebellum plays an important role in the evolution of the pathology in this transgenic mouse model. Sex differences could be crucial for a complete understanding of this disease. We propose that the human population could be studied in this way. Sex-specific treatment strategies in human populations could show a differential response to the therapeutic approach.
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