Abstract

Apolipoprotein E (apoE) is the major apolipoprotein of the CNS. Differential expression of apoE isoforms has been linked to longevity and to the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. Several studies have demonstrated that this glycoprotein is important in mature as well as in aging CNS, where it may serve neurotrophic and/or neuroprotective functions. Some reports have shown that apoE-deficient mice have age-dependent neurodegeneration and cognitive impairment; others have not confirmed these observations. ApoE-deficient mice also develop hypercholesterolemia on a chow diet and have in vivo increased plasma lipid peroxidation products. F2-isoprostanes are prostaglandin F2alpha isomers and chemically stable peroxidation products of arachidonic acid. Both isoprostane F2alpha-III and isoprostane F2alpha-VI were markedly elevated in the brains of aged apoE-deficient mice compared with either wild-type C57 Bl/6 mice or a distinct mouse model of hypercholesterolemia, the low-density lipoprotein receptor-deficient mouse. By contrast, no difference in isoprostane levels was observed in young apoE-deficient mice compared with age-matched wild-type control mice. Our findings indicate that disorder of lipid metabolism in the absence of apoE can induce an age-dependent increase in brain lipid peroxidation products.

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