TY - JOUR
T1 - Loss of amyloid precursor protein in a mouse model of Niemann-Pick type C disease exacerbates its phenotype and disrupts tau homeostasis
AU - Nunes, Ana
AU - Pressey, Sarah N.R.
AU - Cooper, Jonathan D.
AU - Soriano, Salvador
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was funded by the Alzheimer's Research Trust (Grant ART/PhD2005/1 to SS). We also thank the Niemann–Pick Disease Group (UK) for support of JDC. We are grateful to Dr Peter Seubert for the 12E8 antibody and Dr Antonio Currais for insightful reading of this manuscript.
PY - 2011/6
Y1 - 2011/6
N2 - Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC) is a lysosomal storage disorder which, at the cellular level, shows amyloid Aβ and tau pathologies comparable to those seen in the AD brain. Here, we have investigated, in a mouse model of NPC, the impact of removing the source of Aβ, namely APP, on the disease phenotype and on the expression levels and phosphorylation patterns of tau. We reasoned that removing APP from the NPC brain might help to unveil its impact on the disease phenotype and shed light on the mechanisms governing the interaction, both physiological and pathological, between APP function and tau homeostasis, at least in NPC. We show that, unexpectedly, loss of APP in NPC mice leads to poorer neuromuscular coordination and cumulative survival rates; exacerbation of their cholesterol abnormalities; higher levels of astrocytosis and dysregulation of tau homeostasis. Our results are consistent with a mechanism of neurodegeneration in the NPC and AD brains in which cholesterol dysregulation is a key early pathogenic event affecting tau homeostasis in parallel with, and independently of, amyloid accumulation.
AB - Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC) is a lysosomal storage disorder which, at the cellular level, shows amyloid Aβ and tau pathologies comparable to those seen in the AD brain. Here, we have investigated, in a mouse model of NPC, the impact of removing the source of Aβ, namely APP, on the disease phenotype and on the expression levels and phosphorylation patterns of tau. We reasoned that removing APP from the NPC brain might help to unveil its impact on the disease phenotype and shed light on the mechanisms governing the interaction, both physiological and pathological, between APP function and tau homeostasis, at least in NPC. We show that, unexpectedly, loss of APP in NPC mice leads to poorer neuromuscular coordination and cumulative survival rates; exacerbation of their cholesterol abnormalities; higher levels of astrocytosis and dysregulation of tau homeostasis. Our results are consistent with a mechanism of neurodegeneration in the NPC and AD brains in which cholesterol dysregulation is a key early pathogenic event affecting tau homeostasis in parallel with, and independently of, amyloid accumulation.
KW - Alzheimer's disease
KW - Amyloid
KW - Cerebellum
KW - Cholesterol
KW - Niemann-Pick type C
KW - Tau
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U2 - 10.1016/j.nbd.2011.01.028
DO - 10.1016/j.nbd.2011.01.028
M3 - Article
C2 - 21303697
SN - 0969-9961
VL - 42
SP - 349
EP - 359
JO - Neurobiology of Disease
JF - Neurobiology of Disease
IS - 3
ER -