Abstract

Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) have long been acknowledged as mere disorders of the central nervous system (CNS). However, in recent years the gut with its autonomous nervous system and the multitude of microbial commensals has come into focus. Changes in gut properties have been described in patients and animal disease models such as altered enzyme secretion or architecture of the enteric nervous system. The underlying cellular mechanisms have so far only been poorly investigated. An important organelle for integrating potentially toxic signals such as the AD characteristic A-beta peptide is the primary cilium. This microtubule-based signaling organelle regulates numerous cellular processes. Even though the role of primary cilia in a variety of developmental and disease processes has recently been recognized, the contribution of defective ciliary signaling to neurodegenerative diseases such as AD, however, has not been investigated in detail so far. The AD mouse model 5xFAD was used to analyze possible changes in gut functionality by organ bath measurement of peristalsis movement. Subsequently, we cultured primary enteric neurons from mutant mice and wild type littermate controls and assessed for cellular pathomechanisms. Neurite mass was quantified within transwell culturing experiments. Using a combination of different markers for the primary cilium, cilia number and length were determined using fluorescence microscopy. 5xFAD mice showed altered gut anatomy, motility, and neurite mass of enteric neurons. Moreover, primary cilia could be demonstrated on the surface of enteric neurons and exhibited an elongated phenotype in 5xFAD mice. In parallel, we observed reduced β-Catenin expression, a key signaling molecule that regulates Wnt signaling, which is regulated in part via ciliary associated mechanisms. Both results could be recapitulated via in vitro treatments of enteric neurons from wild type mice with A-beta. So far, only a few reports on the probable role of primary cilia in AD can be found. Here, we reveal for the first time an architectural altered phenotype of primary cilia in the enteric nervous system of AD model mice, elicited potentially by neurotoxic A-beta. Potential changes on the sub-organelle level—also in CNS-derived neurons—require further investigations.

Highlights

  • Differences in Gut Anatomy and Function Driven by familial AD (FAD) Mutations in a Mouse Model of Alzheimer’s Disease

  • Differences in gut anatomy have been described for many rodent models of diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD) or Parkinson’s disease (PD) [16,23]

  • We set out to examine the ciliary phenotype in enteric neurons of the widely used 5xFAD Alzheimer mouse model in an attempt to gather novel insights into possible gut-prone disease mechanisms

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Summary

Introduction

Not to be confused with motile cilia, which serve to generate fluid flow over membrane surfaces, primary cilia are specialized signaling organelles important for transduction of a wide range of signaling pathways [2]. Defects in ciliary signaling lead to a range of syndromic disorders collectively termed ciliopathies, which affect a multitude of organs and tissue types [3]. As research into primary cilia increases, it is becoming clear that ciliary defects underlie a wide variety of non-syndromic diseases [4,5,6]. This is not surprising, given that primary cilia are so ubiquitous and play vital roles in cell and tissue homeostasis

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