4.5 Article

Amyloid-beta Deposition and Olfactory Dysfunction in an Alzheimer's Disease Model

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 699-712

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-122443

Keywords

A beta deposition pattern; A beta PP/PS1 transgenic mice; Alzheimer's disease; olfactory system

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Funding

  1. Natural National Science Foundation of China [31000494, 30788002, 20921004, 21105116]

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Olfactory dysfunction is closely related to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Yet the mechanism behind this dysfunction remains largely unknown. To clarify the relationship between olfactory and memory deficits, we assessed behavioral and olfactory system pathology in A beta PP/PS1 transgenic mice using the olfactory threshold test, the Morris water maze, Western blotting, immunohistochemistry (IHC), and thioflavine-s staining. Western blotting revealed the following spatial-temporal deposition of amyloid-beta (A beta): appeared in the olfactory epithelium at 1-2 months old (mo); expanded to the olfactory bulb at 3-4 mo; expanded to the anterior olfactory nucleus, piriform cortex, entorhinal cortex, and hippocampus at 6-7 mo; and increased with age (9-10 mo) in the more central cortices. IHC staining showed similar results, but the appearance time points for the spotty signals in these brain regions were earlier due to the higher spatial resolution compared with Western blotting. The spread of A beta deposits from the olfactory epithelium to the olfactory bulb, the anterior olfactory nucleus, and piriform cotex (faint) at 3-4 mo correlated with the olfactory detection deficit found at the corresponding age; and the high level of depositions in the more central regions at 9-10 mo correlated with spatial memory deficit at the same age. We also found that a decline in the levels of olfactory marker protein, a marker of functioning olfactory sensory neuron, coincided with soluble A beta aggregates from a very early age in the olfactory epithelium, indicating early olfactory sensory neuron degeneration in the A beta PP/PS1 mouse as in AD patients. The current data suggest that the early deposition of soluble A beta aggregates in the olfactory system and the early deficit in olfactory dysfunction have the potential to serve as molecular markers for the early diagnosis of AD.

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