The effects of APOE4 and familial Alzheimer's disease mutations on free fatty acid profiles in mouse brain are age- and sex-dependent.
Sandra den HoedtSimone M CrivelliKristien Y Dorst-LagerwerfFrank P J LeijtenMario LosenHelga E de VriesEric J G SijbrandsAdrie J M VerhoevenPilar Martinez-MartinezMonique T MulderPublished in: Journal of neurochemistry (2024)
APOE4 encoding apolipoprotein (Apo)E4 is the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). ApoE is key in intercellular lipid trafficking. Fatty acids are essential for brain integrity and cognitive performance and are implicated in neurodegeneration. We determined the sex- and age-dependent effect of AD and APOE4 on brain free fatty acid (FFA) profiles. FFA profiles were determined by LC-MS/MS in hippocampus, cortex, and cerebellum of female and male, young (≤3 months) and older (>5 months), transgenic APOE3 and APOE4 mice with and without five familial AD (FAD) mutations (16 groups; n = 7-10 each). In the different brain regions, females had higher levels than males of either saturated or polyunsaturated FFAs or both. In the hippocampus of young males, but not of older males, APOE4 and FAD each induced 1.3-fold higher levels of almost all FFAs. In young and older females, FAD and to a less extent APOE4-induced shifts among saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated FFAs without affecting total FFA levels. In cortex and cerebellum, APOE4 and FAD had only minor effects on individual FFAs. The effects of APOE4 and FAD on FFA levels and FFA profiles in the three brain regions were strongly dependent of sex and age, particularly in the hippocampus. Here, most FFAs that are affected by FAD are similarly affected by APOE4. Since APOE4 and FAD affected hippocampal FFA profiles already at young age, these APOE4-induced alterations may modulate the pathogenesis of AD.