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    Plaque-Associated Oligomeric Amyloid-Beta Drives Early Synaptotoxicity in APP/PS1 Mice Hippocampus: Ultrastructural Pathology Analysis

    • Autor
      Sánchez-Varo, Raquel MaríaAutoridad Universidad de Málaga; Sánchez-Mejías, ElisabethAutoridad Universidad de Málaga; Fernández-Valenzuela, Juan José; De Castro Carratalá, Vanessa; Mejías-Ortega, Marina; Gómez-Arboledas, Ángela; Jimenez, Sebastian; Sanchez-Mico, Maria Virtudes; Trujillo-Estrada, Laura IsabelAutoridad Universidad de Málaga; Moreno-González, Inés; Baglietto-Vargas, David; Vizuete, Marisa; Dávila-Cansino, José CarlosAutoridad Universidad de Málaga; Vitorica Ferrández, Javier; Gutiérrez-Pérez, AntoniaAutoridad Universidad de Málaga
    • Fecha
      2021-11-04
    • Editorial/Editor
      Frontiers
    • Resumen
      Synaptic dysfunction and loss have been established as the pathological features that best correlate with the early cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). At the histopathological level, post mortem AD brains exhibit intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and accumulation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides in the form of extracellular deposits. Specifically, the oligomeric soluble forms of Abeta are considered the most synaptotoxic species. In addition, neuritic plaques are Abeta deposits surrounded by activated microglia and astroglia cells together with abnormal swellings of neuronal processes named dystrophic neurites. These periplaque aberrant neurites are mostly presynaptic elements and represent the first pathological indicator of synaptic dysfunction. The hippocampus is one of the brain regions most affected in AD patients. In this work, we report an early decline in spatial memory, along with hippocampal synaptic changes, in an amyloidogenic APP/PS1 transgenic model. Quantitative electron microscopy revealed a spatial synaptotoxic pattern around neuritic plaques with significant loss of periplaque synaptic terminals, showing rising synapse loss close to the border, especially in larger plaques. Moreover, dystrophic presynapses were filled with autophagic vesicles in detriment of the presynaptic vesicular density, probably interfering with synaptic function at very early synaptopathological stages. Electron immunogold labeling showed that the periphery of plaques, and the associated dystrophic neurites, was enriched in Abeta oligomers supporting an extracellular location of the synaptotoxins. Finally, the incubation of primary neurons with soluble fractions derived from 6-month-old APP/PS1 hippocampus induced significant loss of synaptic proteins, but not neuronal death. This preclinical transgenic model may serve to investigate therapies targeted at initial stages of synaptic dysfunction relevant to the prodromal and early AD.
    • URI
      https://hdl.handle.net/10630/28961
    • DOI
      https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2021.752594
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    Sanchez-Varo et al 2021.pdf (5.356Mb)
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    REPOSITORIO INSTITUCIONAL UNIVERSIDAD DE MÁLAGA
    REPOSITORIO INSTITUCIONAL UNIVERSIDAD DE MÁLAGA
     

     

    REPOSITORIO INSTITUCIONAL UNIVERSIDAD DE MÁLAGA
    REPOSITORIO INSTITUCIONAL UNIVERSIDAD DE MÁLAGA