4.5 Article

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram ameliorates cognitive decline and protects against amyloid beta-induced mitochondrial dynamics, biogenesis, autophagy, mitophagy and synaptic toxicities in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease

Journal

HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
Volume 30, Issue 9, Pages 789-810

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddab091

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Association [2016-NIRG-39787]
  2. Center of Excellence for Translational Neuroscience and Therapeutics [PN-CTNT20115-AR]
  3. NIH [AG063162, R01AG042178, R01AG47812, R01NS105473, AG069333, AG066347]
  4. Alzheimer's Association through a SAGA grant

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study investigates the protective role of citalopram against cognitive decline, impaired mitochondrial dynamics, and synaptic dysfunction in an Alzheimer's disease mouse model. Citalopram treatment improved cognitive behavior, reduced Aβ levels, and decreased mitochondrial and synaptic toxicities in the treated mice compared to the untreated mice. The findings suggest that citalopram may have a strong protective effect against injuries induced by mutant APP and Aβ in depression, anxiety, and AD patients.
In the current study, we investigated the protective role of citalopram against cognitive decline, impaired mitochondrial dynamics, defective mitochondrial biogenesis, defective autophagy, mitophagy and synaptic dysfunction in APP transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease (AD). We treated 12-month-old wild-type (WT) and age-matched transgenic APP mice with citalopram for 2 months. Using Morris Water Maze and rotarod tests, quantitative RT-PCR, immunoblotting, biochemical methods and transmission electron microscopy methods, we assessed cognitive behavior, RNA and protein levels of mitochondrial dynamics, biogenesis, autophagy, mitophagy, synaptic, AD-related and neurogenesis genes in wild-type and APP mice treated and untreated with citalopram. Citalopram-treated APP mice relative to citalopram-untreated APP mice exhibited improved cognitive behavior. Increased levels of mRNA associated with mitochondrial fission and AD-related genes; decreased levels of fusion, biogenesis, autophagy, mitophagy, synaptic and neurogenesis genes were found in APP mice relative to WT mice. However, APP mice treated with citalopram compared to citalopram-untreated APP mice revealed reduced levels of the mitochondrial fission and AD-related genes and increased fusion, biogenesis, autophagy, mitophagy, synaptic and neurogenesis genes. Our protein data agree with the mRNA levels. Transmission electron microscopy revealed significantly increased mitochondrial numbers and reduced mitochondrial length in APP mice; these were reversed in citalopram-treated APP mice. Further, Golgi-cox staining analysis revealed reduced dendritic spines in APP mice relative to WT mice. However, citalopram-treated APP mice showed significantly increased dendritic spines, indicating that citalopram enhances spine density, synaptic activity and improved cognitive function in APP mice. These findings suggest that citalopram reduces cognitive decline, A beta levels and mitochondrial and synaptic toxicities and may have a strong protective role against mutant APP and A beta-induced injuries in patients with depression, anxiety and AD.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available