Abstract

Pyroglutamate-modified Aβ peptides at amino acid position three (Aβ(pE3-42)) are gaining considerable attention as potential key players in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease (AD). Aβ(pE3-42) is abundant in AD brain and has a high aggregation propensity, stability and cellular toxicity. The aim of the present work was to study the direct effect of elevated Aβ(pE3-42) levels on ongoing AD pathology using transgenic mouse models. To this end, we generated a novel mouse model (TBA42) that produces Aβ(pE3-42). TBA42 mice showed age-dependent behavioral deficits and Aβ(pE3-42) accumulation. The Aβ profile of an established AD mouse model, 5XFAD, was characterized using immunoprecipitation followed by mass spectrometry. Brains from 5XFAD mice demonstrated a heterogeneous mixture of full-length, N-terminal truncated, and modified Aβ peptides: Aβ(1-42), Aβ(1-40), Aβ(pE3-40), Aβ(pE3-42), Aβ(3-42), Aβ(4-42), and Aβ(5-42). 5XFAD and TBA42 mice were then crossed to generate transgenic FAD42 mice. At 6 months of age, FAD42 mice showed an aggravated behavioral phenotype compared with single transgenic 5XFAD or TBA42 mice. ELISA and plaque load measurements revealed that Aβ(pE3) levels were elevated in FAD42 mice. No change in Aβ(x)(-42) or other Aβ isoforms was discovered by ELISA and mass spectrometry. These observations argue for a seeding effect of Aβ(pE-42) in FAD42 mice.

Highlights

  • Pyroglutamate A␤ is an abundant, toxic peptide in Alzheimer disease brain

  • The aim of the current report was to study the direct effect of an A␤pE3–42 increase in 5XFAD mice, a conventional Alzheimer disease (AD) mouse model expressing human mutant APP and PS1 transgenes

  • Transgenic expression of human QC (hQC) in 5XFAD mice leads to the elevation of A␤pE3, thereby exacerbating behavioral deficits, increasing plaque load, and raising levels of A␤pE3–42 but not general A␤x–42

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Summary

Introduction

Pyroglutamate A␤ is an abundant, toxic peptide in Alzheimer disease brain. Results: Pyroglutamate A␤ aggravates the pre-existing behavioral phenotype of 5XFAD mice. The aim of the present work was to study the direct effect of elevated A␤pE3–42 levels on ongoing AD pathology using transgenic mouse models. To this end, we generated a novel mouse model (TBA42) that produces A␤pE3–42. At 6 months of age, FAD42 mice showed an aggravated behavioral phenotype compared with single transgenic 5XFAD or TBA42 mice. No change in A␤x–42 or other A␤ isoforms was discovered by ELISA and mass spectrometry These observations argue for a seeding effect of A␤pE-42 in FAD42 mice

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