52 research outputs found
Natural Amyloid-Beta Oligomers Acutely Impair the Formation of a Contextual Fear Memory in Mice
Memory loss is one of the hallmark symptoms of Alzheimer's disease (AD). It has been proposed that soluble amyloid-beta (Abeta) oligomers acutely impair neuronal function and thereby memory. We here report that natural Abeta oligomers acutely impair contextual fear memory in mice. A natural Abeta oligomer solution containing Abeta monomers, dimers, trimers, and tetramers was derived from the conditioned medium of 7PA2 cells, a cell line that expresses human amyloid precursor protein containing the Val717Phe familial AD mutation. As a control we used 7PA2 conditioned medium from which Abeta oligomers were removed through immunodepletion. Separate groups of mice were injected with Abeta and control solutions through a cannula into the lateral brain ventricle, and subjected to fear conditioning using two tone-shock pairings. One day after fear conditioning, mice were tested for contextual fear memory and tone fear memory in separate retrieval trials. Three experiments were performed. For experiment 1, mice were injected three times: 1 hour before and 3 hours after fear conditioning, and 1 hour before context retrieval. For experiments 2 and 3, mice were injected a single time at 1 hour and 2 hours before fear conditioning respectively. In all three experiments there was no effect on tone fear memory. Injection of Abeta 1 hour before fear conditioning, but not 2 hours before fear conditioning, impaired the formation of a contextual fear memory. In future studies, the acute effect of natural Abeta oligomers on contextual fear memory can be used to identify potential mechanisms and treatments of AD associated memory loss
Editorial [ New Advances in Alzheimers Disease: From Biology to Therapy Guest Editor: Giuseppina Tesco ]
Editorial [ New Advances in Alzheimers Disease: From Biology to Therapy Guest Editor: Giuseppina Tesco ]
Role of BACE1 in Cognitive Function, from Alzheimer’s Disease to Traumatic Brain Injury
Faculty Opinions recommendation of Anti-aβ therapeutics in Alzheimer's disease: the need for a paradigm shift.
Faculty Opinions recommendation of Will the ubiquitin system furnish as many drug targets as protein kinases?
Faculty Opinions recommendation of Snapin-mediated BACE1 retrograde transport is essential for its degradation in lysosomes and regulation of APP processing in neurons.
Pathophysiology of neurodegenerative diseases: An interplay among axonal transport failure, oxidative stress, and inflammation?
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