Abstract

Mutations in presenilins are the major cause of familial Alzheimer disease, but the precise pathogenic mechanism by which presenilin (PS) mutations cause synaptic dysfunction leading to memory loss and neurodegeneration remains unclear. Using autaptic hippocampal cultures from transgenic mice expressing human PS1 with the A246E mutation, we demonstrate that mutant PS1 significantly depressed the amplitude of evoked alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated synaptic currents. Analysis of the spontaneous miniature synaptic activity revealed a lower frequency of miniature currents but normal miniature amplitude. Both alterations could be rescued by the application of a gamma-secretase blocker. On the other hand, the application of synthetic soluble Abeta42 in wild-type neurons induced the PS1 mutant phenotype on synaptic strength. Together, these findings strongly suggest that the expression of mutant PS1 in cultured neurons depresses synaptic transmission by causing a physical reduction in the number of synapses. This hypothesis is consistent with morphometic and semiquantitative immunohistochemical analysis, revealing a decrease in synaptophysin-positive puncta in PS1 mutant hippocampal neurons.

Highlights

  • The fact that the mEPSC rates were significantly different between the three genotypes suggested that the size of the RRP pool is changed in the presence of PS1mut

  • We calculated the amount of RRP vesicles by dividing the total charge of the transient current component after application of hypertonic sucrose by the charge of a single mEPSC measured from the same cell

  • Our study has primarily shown that excitatory synaptic transmission in cultured hippocampal neurons expressing mutant PS1 is markedly inhibited

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to analyze pre- and postsynaptic mechanisms of synaptic vesicle release in mutant PS1 transgenic mice in detail by studying autapses in single-grown hippocampal neurons

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