Abstract

New studies show that the retina also undergoes pathological changes during the development of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). While transgenic mouse models used in these previous studies have offered insight into this phenomenon, they do not model human sporadic AD, which is the most common form. Recently, the Octodon degus has been established as a sporadic model of AD. Degus display age-related cognitive impairment associated with Aβ aggregates and phosphorylated tau in the brain. Our aim for this study was to examine the expression of AD-related proteins in young, adult and old degus retina using enzyme-linked or fluorescence immunohistochemistry and to quantify the expression using slot blot and western blot assays. Aβ4G8 and Aβ6E10 detected Aβ peptides in some of the young animals but the expression was higher in the adults. Aβ peptides were observed in the inner and outer segment of the photoreceptors, the nerve fiber layer (NFL) and ganglion cell layer (GCL). Expression was higher in the central retinal region than in the retinal periphery. Using an anti-oligomer antibody we detected Aβ oligomer expression in the young, adult and old retina. Immunohistochemical labeling showed small discrete labeling of oligomers in the GCL that did not resemble plaques. Congo red staining did not result in green birefringence in any of the animals analyzed except for one old (84 months) animal. We also investigated expression of tau and phosphorylated tau. Expression was seen at all ages studied and in adults it was more consistently observed in the NFL-GCL. Hyperphosphorylated tau detected with AT8 antibody was significantly higher in the adult retina and it was localized to the GCL. We confirm for the first time that Aβ peptides and phosphorylated tau are expressed in the retina of degus. This is consistent with the proposal that AD biomarkers are present in the eye.

Highlights

  • In search of early biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), attention has been directed to the retina, the lens and the visual pathway [1,2,3,4]

  • We show that the expression is mainly localized to the nerve fiber layer and ganglion cell layer (NFL-GCL) and it is more significantly found in the retina of adult and old animals

  • transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling staining (TUNEL) positive cells were not observed in the young degus (n = 4) but they were observed in the adults in the ONL whole mount (Fig 1E and 1F)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In search of early biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), attention has been directed to the retina, the lens and the visual pathway [1,2,3,4]. Several studies involving transgenic mouse models of familial AD observed specific pathological changes in the retina; some of which were similar to those found in human AD eyes [5,6]. These studies only explain the small number of familial cases. There are no major pathological differences in the brain between sporadic and familial cases in human [7] but there is inconclusive evidence about the pathological changes in the eye [8,9]. Evidence supports the neurotoxicity of tau proteins, which are the primary component of NFT [16]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call