Amyloid Generation and Dysfunctional Immunoproteasome Activation with Disease Progression in Animal Model of Familial Alzheimer¿s Disease
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Aso, E.; Lomoio, S.; López-González, I.; Joda, L.; Carmona, M.; Fernández-Yagüe, N.; Jiménez-Moreno, J.A. (José Antonio); Juvés, S.; Pujol, A.; Pamplona, R.; Portero-Otín, M.; Martín, M.V. (María Virginia); Díaz, M.; Ferrer, I.Date
2012Type
research articleAbstract
Double-transgenic amyloid precursor protein/presenilin 1 (APP/PS1) mice express a chimeric mouse/human APP bearing the Swedish mutation (Mo/HuAPP695swe) and a mutant human PS1-dE9 both causative of familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD). Transgenic mice show impaired memory and learning performance from the age of 6 months onwards. Double-transgenic APP/PS1 mice express altered APP and PS1 mRNAs and proteins, reduced β-secretase 1 (BACE1) mRNA and normal BACE1 protein, all of which suggest a particular mechanism of amyloidogenesis when compared with sporadic AD. The first β-amyloid plaques in APP/PS1 mice appear at 3 months, and they increase in number and distribution with disease progression in parallel with increased levels of brain soluble β-amyloid 1–42 and 1–40, but also with reduced 1–42/1–40 ratio with age. Amyloid deposition in plaques is accompanied by altered mitochondria and increased oxidative damage, post-translational modifications and accumulation of altered proteins at the ...