Cognitively impaired aged Octodon degus recapitulate major neuropathological features of sporadic Alzheimer's disease.
Zhiqun TanB Maximiliano GarduñoPedro Fernández AburtoLujia ChenNicole HaPatricia CogramTodd C HolmesXiangmin XuPublished in: Acta neuropathologica communications (2022)
The long-lived Chilean rodent (Octodon degus) has been reported to show spontaneous age-dependent neuropathology and cognitive impairments similar to those observed in human AD. However, the handful of published papers on degus of differing genetic backgrounds yield inconsistent findings about sporadic AD-like pathological features, with notably differing results between lab in-bred degus versus outbred degus. This motivates more extensive characterization of spontaneously occurring AD-like pathology and behavior in degus. In the present study, we show AD-like neuropathological markers in the form of amyloid deposits and tau abnormalities in a cognitively impaired subset of aged outbred degus. Compared to the aged degus that show normal burrowing behavior, the age-matched degus with burrowing behavior deficits correlatively exhibit detectable human AD-like Aβ deposits and tau neuropathology, along with neuroinflammatory markers that include enhanced microglial activation and higher numbers of reactive astrocytes in the brain. This subset of cognitively impaired aged degus also exhibits cerebral amyloid angiopathy and tauopathy. We find robust neurodegenerative features in behaviorally deficient aged degus, including hippocampal neuronal loss, altered parvalbumin and perineuronal net staining in the cortex, and increased c-Fos neuronal activation in the cortex that is consistent with the neural circuit hyperactivity reported in human AD patients. By focusing on the subset of aged degus that show AD-like behavioral deficits and correlative neuropathology, our findings establish outbred degus as a natural model of sporadic AD and demonstrate the potential importance of wild-type outbred genetic backgrounds for AD pathogenesis.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- cognitive decline
- traumatic brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- systematic review
- end stage renal disease
- gene expression
- pluripotent stem cells
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- mild cognitive impairment
- multiple sclerosis
- genome wide
- newly diagnosed
- cerebrospinal fluid
- inflammatory response
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- risk assessment
- copy number
- patient reported outcomes
- spinal cord
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- meta analyses