Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is characterized by brain amyloid‐β plaque formation, neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, which lead to cognitive impairment (CI) and disruption of circadian rhythm. Bioactive steroidal Na/K‐ATPase inhibitor marinobufagenin (MBG) modulates neuroinflammation. In 16‐mo old double transgenic APPswe/PS1dE9 AD mice with advanced AD, treatment with MBG reduced mRNA expression of inflammatory markers. Here, we investigated whether treatment with MBG at early‐stage AD may impact AD manifestation in this AD mouse model.MethodsFive months old male AD mice (n = 15) and WT mice (n = 28) were administered MBG (100 µg/day/kg body weight) (AD‐MBG, n = 8; WT‐MBG, n = 14) or vehicle for control (AD‐C, n = 7; WT‐C, n = 14) via subcutaneous ALZET osmotic minipumps for 3 months. At 8‐mo of age, the mice underwent turn‐based discrimination learning in a water T‐maze (WTM) to assess procedural learning and 72‐hour home cage activity (HCA) analysis to assess circadian rhythm. The hippocampal inflammatory and AD mRNAs (by qPCR) and MBG levels (by immunoassay) were measured.ResultsMBG administration increased plasma MBG levels in WT and AD mice (Table 1). AD‐C mice exhibited greater home cage activity disruption vs. WT‐C (Fig.1a); in WTM, AD‐C required more trials to learn the turn‐based task than WT‐C (Fig. 1b). Though statistically insignificant, trends showed that MBG numerically worsened activity disruption by HCA and decreased ability to learn turn‐based task by WTM in WT mice, while numerically improving both measures in AD mice. During the reversal phase of WTM where response requirements were reversed, WT‐C mice performed significantly better than AD‐C mice, measured by the cumulative amount of time spent in the incorrect arm until reaching criterion performance (p = 0.038). Similar patterns of numerical improvement in AD‐MBG compared to AD‐C are shown (Fig. 1c). Hippocampal inflammatory and AD markers mRNAs were upregulated in AD‐C vs. WT‐C, and MBG treatment downregulated the expression of TNF and GFAP in AD mice (Table 1).ConclusionsBehavioral testing results illustrate CI and circadian impairment in 8‐mo old AD mice compared to WT. Numerical trends show a potential protective effect of MBG on AD CI likely via downregulation of hippocampal TNF and GFAP genes.0Supported by the NIH/NIA Intramural Research Program

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