TY  - JOUR
T1  - New Insights into the Spontaneous Human Alzheimer's Disease-Like Model Octodon degus
T2  - Unraveling Amyloid-β Peptide Aggregation and Age-Related Amyloid Pathology
AU  - Cisternas, Pedro
AU  - Zolezzi, Juan M.
AU  - Lindsay, Carolina
AU  - Rivera, Daniela S.
AU  - Martinez, Alexis
AU  - Bozinovic, Francisco
AU  - Inestrosa, Nibaldo C.
N1  - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018-IOS Press and the authors. All rights reserved.
PY  - 2018
Y1  - 2018
N2  - Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia worldwide. Despite advances in our understanding of the molecular milieu driving AD pathophysiology, no effective therapy is currently available. Moreover, various clinical trials have continued to fail, suggesting that our approach to AD must be revised. Accordingly, the development and validation of new models are highly desirable. Over the last decade, we have been working with Octodon degus (degu), a Chilean rodent, which spontaneously develops AD-like neuropathology, including increased amyloid-β (Aβ) aggregates, tau hyperphosphorylation, and postsynaptic dysfunction. However, for proper validation of degu as an AD model, the aggregation properties of its Aβ peptide must be analyzed. Thus, in this study, we examined the capacity of the degu Aβ peptide to aggregate in vitro. Then, we analyzed the age-dependent variation in soluble Aβ levels in the hippocampus and cortex of third-to fifth-generation captive-born degu. We also assessed the appearance and spatial distribution of amyloid plaques in O. degus and compared them with the plaques in two AD transgenic mouse models. In agreement with our previous studies, degu Aβ was able to aggregate, forming fibrillar species in vitro. Furthermore, amyloid plaques appeared in the anterior brain structures of O. degus at approximately 32 months of age and in the whole brain at 56 months, along with concomitant increases in Aβ levels and the Aβ 42 /Aβ 40 ratio, indicating that O. degus spontaneously develops AD-like pathology earlier than other spontaneous models. Based on these results, we can confirm that O. degus constitutes a valuable model to improve AD research.
AB  - Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia worldwide. Despite advances in our understanding of the molecular milieu driving AD pathophysiology, no effective therapy is currently available. Moreover, various clinical trials have continued to fail, suggesting that our approach to AD must be revised. Accordingly, the development and validation of new models are highly desirable. Over the last decade, we have been working with Octodon degus (degu), a Chilean rodent, which spontaneously develops AD-like neuropathology, including increased amyloid-β (Aβ) aggregates, tau hyperphosphorylation, and postsynaptic dysfunction. However, for proper validation of degu as an AD model, the aggregation properties of its Aβ peptide must be analyzed. Thus, in this study, we examined the capacity of the degu Aβ peptide to aggregate in vitro. Then, we analyzed the age-dependent variation in soluble Aβ levels in the hippocampus and cortex of third-to fifth-generation captive-born degu. We also assessed the appearance and spatial distribution of amyloid plaques in O. degus and compared them with the plaques in two AD transgenic mouse models. In agreement with our previous studies, degu Aβ was able to aggregate, forming fibrillar species in vitro. Furthermore, amyloid plaques appeared in the anterior brain structures of O. degus at approximately 32 months of age and in the whole brain at 56 months, along with concomitant increases in Aβ levels and the Aβ 42 /Aβ 40 ratio, indicating that O. degus spontaneously develops AD-like pathology earlier than other spontaneous models. Based on these results, we can confirm that O. degus constitutes a valuable model to improve AD research.
KW  - Alzheimer's disease
KW  - Aβ peptide
KW  - natural model
KW  - Octodon degus
KW  - senile plaques
UR  - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85057173069&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2  - 10.3233/JAD-180729
DO  - 10.3233/JAD-180729
M3  - Article
C2  - 30412496
AN  - SCOPUS:85057173069
SN  - 1387-2877
VL  - 66
SP  - 1145
EP  - 1163
JO  - Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
JF  - Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
IS  - 3
ER  -