4.7 Article

Survival Bias and Crosstalk between Chronological and Behavioral Age: Age- and Genotype-Sensitivity Tests Define Behavioral Signatures in Middle-Aged, Old, and Long-Lived Mice with Normal and AD-Associated Aging

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9060636

Keywords

survival; aging; Alzheimer's disease; heterogeneity; long-life; gait analysis; cognition; BPSD

Funding

  1. BrightFocus Foundation, US [A2017243S]
  2. INVICTUS+network, Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Spain [RD16/0019/0021]
  3. European Regional Development Fund FEDER
  4. Vall d'Hebron Research Institute

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New evidence suggests a high degree of heterogeneity in clinical and temporal patterns in normal and Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients, with increased mortality and the need for specific end-of-life prognosticators. In a study involving 915 mice, it was found that male APP23 mice had better survival curves than females, allowing for the characterization of behavioral signatures in middle-aged, old, and long-lived male animals. Different behavioral features were observed in male APP23 mice compared to controls, especially in coping with stress, thigmotaxis, frailty, gait, and cognition, showing age- and genotype-dependent non-linear behavioral signatures in long-lived animals.
New evidence refers to a high degree of heterogeneity in normal but also Alzheimer's disease (AD) clinical and temporal patterns, increased mortality, and the need to find specific end-of-life prognosticators. This heterogeneity is scarcely explored in very old male AD mice models due to their reduced survival. In the present work, using 915 (432 APP23 and 483 C57BL/6 littermates) mice, we confirmed the better survival curves in male than female APP23 mice and respective wildtypes, providing the chance to characterize behavioral signatures in middle-aged, old, and long-lived male animals. The sensitivity of a battery of seven paradigms for comprehensive screening of motor (activity and gait analysis), neuropsychiatric and cognitive symptoms was analyzed using a cohort of 56 animals, composed of 12-, 18- and 24-month-old male APP23 mice and wildtype littermates. Most variables analyzed detected age-related differences. However, variables related to coping with stress, thigmotaxis, frailty, gait, and poor cognition better discriminated the behavioral phenotype of male APP23 mice through the three old ages compared with controls. Most importantly, non-linear age- and genotype-dependent behavioral signatures were found in long-lived animals, suggesting crosstalk between chronological and biological/behavioral ages useful to study underlying mechanisms and distinct compensations through physiological and AD-associated aging.

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