4.5 Article

RhoA-LIMK Signaling Axis Reveals Rostral-Caudal Plane and Spatial Dysregulation in the Brain of Alzheimer's Disease Mouse Models

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 95, Issue 4, Pages 1643-1656

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-230408

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; cell signaling; LIM kinase; mouse models; planar distribution; Rho GTPases; spatial expression

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This study found that the RhoA signaling is dysregulated in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and is associated with spatial distribution along the rostral-caudal plane. The expression pattern of RhoA and LIMK varies from the cortex to the dentate gyrus. pRhoA shows dynamic redistribution between the nucleus and cytoplasm, while pLIMK demonstrates changes in expression level in different regions.
Background: RhoA signaling is widely reported to be dysregulated in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but its therapeutic targeting demonstrated mixed outcomes. We hypothesize that the activation and inactivation states of RhoA and LIMK are different in the cortex and in subregions of hippocampus along the rostral-caudal dimensions. Objective: We intended to elucidate the plane and spatial dependent RhoA signaling in association with AD. Methods: We applied antibody pRhoA that recognizes an inactive state of RhoA (S188 phosphorylation) and antibody pLIMK against an active state of LIMK (T508 phosphorylation) to investigate RhoA signaling in wildtype (WT) and triple transgenic AD (3xTg-AD) mouse model. We prepared serial sections from the rostral to caudal coronal planes of the entire mouse brain followed by immunofluorescence staining with pRhoA and pLIMK antibodies. Results: Both pRhoA and pLIMK elicited a shift of expression pattern from rostral to caudal planes. Additionally, pRhoA demonstrated dynamic redistribution between the nucleus and cytoplasm. pLIMK did not show such nucleus and cytoplasm redistribution but the expression level was changed from rostral to caudal planes. At some planes, pRhoA showed an increasing trend in expression in the cortex but a decreasing trend in the dentate gyrus of the 3xTg-AD mouse hippocampus. pLIMK tends to decrease in the cortex but increase in the dentate gyrus of 3xTg-AD mouse hippocampus. Conclusions: RhoA activation is dysregulated in both human and mouse AD brains, and the RhoA-LIMK signaling axis reveals spatial dysregulation along the rostral-caudal plane dimensions.

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