Uncovering Disease Mechanisms in a Novel Mouse Model Expressing Humanized APOEε4 and Trem2*R47H

dc.contributor.authorKotredes, Kevin P.
dc.contributor.authorOblak, Adrian
dc.contributor.authorPandey, Ravi S.
dc.contributor.authorLin, Peter Bor-Chian
dc.contributor.authorGarceau, Dylan
dc.contributor.authorWilliams, Harriet
dc.contributor.authorUyar, Asli
dc.contributor.authorO’Rourke, Rita
dc.contributor.authorO’Rourke, Sarah
dc.contributor.authorIngraham, Cynthia
dc.contributor.authorBednarczyk, Daria
dc.contributor.authorBelanger, Melisa
dc.contributor.authorCope, Zackary
dc.contributor.authorFoley, Kate E.
dc.contributor.authorLogsdon, Benjamin A.
dc.contributor.authorMangravite, Lara M.
dc.contributor.authorSukoff Rizzo, Stacey J.
dc.contributor.authorTerrito, Paul R.
dc.contributor.authorCarter, Gregory W.
dc.contributor.authorSasner, Michael
dc.contributor.authorLamb, Bruce T.
dc.contributor.authorHowell, Gareth R.
dc.contributor.departmentRadiology and Imaging Sciences, School of Medicine
dc.date.accessioned2024-07-18T11:55:50Z
dc.date.available2024-07-18T11:55:50Z
dc.date.issued2021-10-11
dc.description.abstractLate-onset Alzheimer’s disease (AD; LOAD) is the most common human neurodegenerative disease, however, the availability and efficacy of disease-modifying interventions is severely lacking. Despite exceptional efforts to understand disease progression via legacy amyloidogenic transgene mouse models, focus on disease translation with innovative mouse strains that better model the complexity of human AD is required to accelerate the development of future treatment modalities. LOAD within the human population is a polygenic and environmentally influenced disease with many risk factors acting in concert to produce disease processes parallel to those often muted by the early and aggressive aggregate formation in popular mouse strains. In addition to extracellular deposits of amyloid plaques and inclusions of the microtubule-associated protein tau, AD is also defined by synaptic/neuronal loss, vascular deficits, and neuroinflammation. These underlying processes need to be better defined, how the disease progresses with age, and compared to human-relevant outcomes. To create more translatable mouse models, MODEL-AD (Model Organism Development and Evaluation for Late-onset AD) groups are identifying and integrating disease-relevant, humanized gene sequences from public databases beginning with APOEε4 and Trem2*R47H, two of the most powerful risk factors present in human LOAD populations. Mice expressing endogenous, humanized APOEε4 and Trem2*R47H gene sequences were extensively aged and assayed using a multi-disciplined phenotyping approach associated with and relative to human AD pathology. Robust analytical pipelines measured behavioral, transcriptomic, metabolic, and neuropathological phenotypes in cross-sectional cohorts for progression of disease hallmarks at all life stages. In vivo PET/MRI neuroimaging revealed regional alterations in glycolytic metabolism and vascular perfusion. Transcriptional profiling by RNA-Seq of brain hemispheres identified sex and age as the main sources of variation between genotypes including age-specific enrichment of AD-related processes. Similarly, age was the strongest determinant of behavioral change. In the absence of mouse amyloid plaque formation, many of the hallmarks of AD were not observed in this strain. However, as a sensitized baseline model with many additional alleles and environmental modifications already appended, the dataset from this initial MODEL-AD strain serves an important role in establishing the individual effects and interaction between two strong genetic risk factors for LOAD in a mouse host.
dc.eprint.versionFinal published version
dc.identifier.citationKotredes KP, Oblak A, Pandey RS, et al. Uncovering Disease Mechanisms in a Novel Mouse Model Expressing Humanized APOEε4 and Trem2*R47H [published correction appears in Front Aging Neurosci. 2022 Feb 07;14:857628. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.857628]. Front Aging Neurosci. 2021;13:735524. Published 2021 Oct 11. doi:10.3389/fnagi.2021.735524
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/42300
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherFrontiers Media
dc.relation.isversionof10.3389/fnagi.2021.735524
dc.relation.journalFrontiers in Aging Neuroscience
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 Internationalen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.sourcePMC
dc.subjectApoE4
dc.subjectTREM2
dc.subjectMouse model
dc.subjectMODEL-AD
dc.subjectLate-onset AD
dc.titleUncovering Disease Mechanisms in a Novel Mouse Model Expressing Humanized APOEε4 and Trem2*R47H
dc.typeArticle
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