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Publication : Most dystrophic neurites in the common 5xFAD Alzheimer mouse model originate from axon terminals.

First Author  Mabrouk R Year  2023
Journal  Neurobiol Dis Volume  182
Pages  106150 PubMed ID  37172911
Mgi Jnum  J:348211 Mgi Id  MGI:7487832
Doi  10.1016/j.nbd.2023.106150 Citation  Mabrouk R, et al. (2023) Most dystrophic neurites in the common 5xFAD Alzheimer mouse model originate from axon terminals. Neurobiol Dis 182:106150
abstractText  How dystrophic neurites form around amyloid plaques is a key aspect of understanding the early pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease. At present, three hypotheses prevail: (1) dystrophies result from extracellular amyloid-beta (Abeta) toxicity; (2) dystrophies results from accumulation of Abeta into distal neurites; and (3) dystrophies represent blebbing of the somatic membrane of a neuron with high Abeta load. We utilized a unique feature of the common 5xFAD AD mouse model to test these hypotheses. Cortical layer 5 pyramidal neurons show intracellular APP and Abeta accumulation before amyloid plaque formation while dentate granule cells in these mice show no APP accumulation at any age. However, the dentate gyrus shows amyloid plaques by 3 months of age. By a careful confocal microscopic analysis we found no evidence of severe degeneration in amyloid laden layer 5 pyramidal neurons in contrast to hypothesis 3. Using injecting red fluorescent marker into lateral entorhinal projection neurons in 5xFAD mice with endogenous green fluorescent protein (GFP) in dentate granule cells we could demonstrate that all dystrophies is outer molecular layer originate from the axon terminal of entorhinal projection neurons. Immunostaining with vesicular glutamate transporter supported the axonal nature of the dystrophies in the acellular dentate molecular layer. We observed few small dystrophies in the GFP labeled granule cell dendrites. In general GFP labeled dendrites appear normal around the amyloid plaques. These findings favor hypothesis 2 as the most likely mechanism of dystrophic neurite formation.
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