4.7 Article

Genotype Load Modulates Amyloid Burden and Anxiety-Like Patterns in Male 3xTg-AD Survivors despite Similar Neuro-Immunoendocrine, Synaptic and Cognitive Impairments

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9070715

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; genetic load; survival; end-of-life; frailty; heterogeneity; BPSD; NPS; neuro-immunoendocrine crosstalk

Funding

  1. European Union [737390]
  2. [UAB-GE-260408]

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The wide heterogeneity and complexity of clinical profiles and increased mortality in Alzheimer's disease patients highlight the relevance of personalized interventions and the need for end-of-life/survival predictors. Studying genetic and age interactions in a context of AD-genetic-load expression levels can help understand this heterogeneity better. The study on long-lived 3xTg-AD mice revealed genetic-load-dependent changes in pathological burden, behavioral phenotypes, and neuro-immunoendocrine status, providing insights into genetic-load and age-dependent vulnerability/compensatory mechanisms in AD.
The wide heterogeneity and complexity of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients' clinical profiles and increased mortality highlight the relevance of personalized-based interventions and the need for end-of-life/survival predictors. At the translational level, studying genetic and age interactions in a context of different levels of expression of AD-genetic-load can help to understand this heterogeneity better. In the present report, a singular cohort of long-lived (19-month-old survivors) heterozygous and homozygous male 3xTg-AD mice were studied to determine whether their AD-genotype load can modulate the brain and peripheral pathological burden, behavioral phenotypes, and neuro-immunoendocrine status, compared to age-matched non-transgenic controls. The results indicated increased amyloid precursor protein (APP) levels in a genetic-load-dependent manner but convergent synaptophysin and choline acetyltransferase brain levels. Cognitive impairment and HPA-axis hyperactivation were salient traits in both 3xTg-AD survivor groups. In contrast, genetic load elicited different anxiety-like profiles, with hypoactive homozygous, while heterozygous resembled controls in some traits and risk assessment. Complex neuro-immunoendocrine crosstalk was also observed. Bodyweight loss and splenic, renal, and hepatic histopathological injury scores provided evidence of the systemic features of AD, despite similar peripheral organs' oxidative stress. The present study provides an interesting translational scenario to study further genetic-load and age-dependent vulnerability/compensatory mechanisms in Alzheimer's disease.

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