4.7 Article

Aβ mediates F-actin disassembly in dendritic spines leading to cognitive deficits in Alzheimer's disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 1085-1099

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2127-17.2017

Keywords

cognition; cytoskeleton; dementia; neurodegenerative disease

Categories

Funding

  1. Tata Trusts
  2. National Institute on Aging-National Institutes of Health [P30AG10161, RF1AG15819]
  3. Science and Engineering Research Board [PDF/2016/003226]

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Dendritic spine loss is recognized as an early feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Dendritic spine structure is defined by filamentous actin (F-actin) and we observed depolymerization of synaptosomal F-actin accompanied by increased globular-actin (G-actin) at as early as 1 month of age in a mouse model of AD(APPswe/PS1 Delta E9, male mice). This led to recall deficit after contextual fear conditioning (cFC) at 2 months of age in APPswe/PS1 Delta E9 male mice, which could be reversed by the actin-polymerizing agent jasplakinolide. Further, the F-actin-depolymerizing agent latrunculin induced recall deficit after cFC in WT mice, indicating the importance of maintaining F-/G-actin equilibrium for optimal behavioral response. Using direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM), we show that F-actin depolymerization in spines leads to a breakdown of the nano-organization of outwardly radiating F-actin rods in cortical neurons from APPswe/PS1 Delta E9 mice. Our results demonstrate that synaptic dysfunction seen as F-actin disassembly occurs very early, before onset of pathological hallmarks in AD mice, and contributes to behavioral dysfunction, indicating that depolymerization of F-actin is causal and not consequent to decreased spine density. Further, we observed decreased synaptosomal F-actin levels in postmortem brain from mild cognitive impairment and AD patients compared with subjects with normal cognition. F-actin decrease correlated inversely with increasing AD pathology (Braak score, A beta load, and tangle density) and directly with performance in episodic and working memory tasks, suggesting its role in human disease pathogenesis and progression.

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