4.4 Article

Dietary lipophilic iron alters amyloidogenesis and microglial morphology in Alzheimer's disease knock-in APP mice

Journal

METALLOMICS
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 426-443

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8mt00004b

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized pathologically by amyloid beta (A) deposition, microgliosis, and iron dyshomeostasis. Increased labile iron due to homeostatic dysregulation is believed to facilitate amyloidogenesis. Free iron is incorporated into aggregating amyloid peptides during A plaque formation and increases potential for oxidative stress surrounding plaques. The goal of this work was to observe how brain iron levels temporally influence A plaque formation, plaque iron concentration, and microgliosis. We fed humanized APP(NL-F) and APP(NL-G-F) knock-in mice lipophilic iron compound 3,5,5-trimethylhexanoyl ferrocene (TMHF) and iron deficient diets for twelve months. TMHF elevated brain iron by 22% and iron deficiency decreased brain iron 21% relative to control diet. Increasing brain iron with TMHF accelerated plaque formation, increased A staining, and increased senile morphology of amyloid plaques. Increased brain iron was associated with increased plaque-iron loading and microglial iron inclusions. TMHF decreased IBA1+ microglia branch length while increasing roundness indicative of microglial activation. This body of work suggests that increasing mouse brain iron with TMHF potentiates a more human-like Alzheimer's disease phenotype with iron integration into A plaques and associated microgliosis.

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