Early loss of locus coeruleus innervation promotes cognitive and neuropathological changes before amyloid plaque deposition in a transgenic rat model of Alzheimer's disease

Aims The locus coeruleus (LC) is the main source of noradrenaline (NA) in the mammalian brain and has been found to degenerate during the initial stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent studies indicate that at late stages of the amyloid pathology, LC‐pathological alterations accelerate AD‐l...

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Published inNeuropathology and applied neurobiology Vol. 48; no. 6; pp. e12835 - n/a
Main Authors Flores‐Aguilar, Lisi, Hall, Hélène, Orciani, Chiara, Foret, Morgan K., Kovecses, Olivia, Ducatenzeiler, Adriana, Cuello, A. Claudio
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.10.2022
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ISSN0305-1846
1365-2990
1365-2990
DOI10.1111/nan.12835

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Summary:Aims The locus coeruleus (LC) is the main source of noradrenaline (NA) in the mammalian brain and has been found to degenerate during the initial stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent studies indicate that at late stages of the amyloid pathology, LC‐pathological alterations accelerate AD‐like pathology progression by interfering with the neuromodulatory and anti‐inflammatory properties of NA. However, the impact of LC degeneration at the earliest stages of amyloidosis on the AD‐like pathology is not well understood. Methods The LC was lesioned in wild‐type and McGill‐R‐Thy1‐APP transgenic (APP tg) rats by administering N‐(2‐chloroethyl)‐N‐ethyl‐bromo‐benzylamine before amyloid plaque deposition. Cognitive deficits and AD‐like neuropathological changes were measured after the LC lesion. Results Four months post‐treatment, rats displayed a decrease in brain noradrenergic innervation. The LC lesion in APP tg‐treated rats enhanced cognitive deficits and decreased hippocampal cholinergic innervation and neurotrophin expression. In addition, the APP tg‐treated rats displayed an increased microglial and astroglial cell number in close vicinity to hippocampal amyloid‐beta burdened neurons. The recruited microglia showed cellular alterations indicative of an intermediate activation state. Conclusions Our results indicate that early LC demise aggravates the early neuroinflammatory process, cognitive impairments, cholinergic deficits and neurotrophin deregulation at the earliest stages of the human‐like brain amyloidosis. In this study, we report that LC demise at incipient stages of amyloid‐like pathology promoted cholinergic deficits, neurotrophin and cytokine deregulation, and cognitive deficits. These changes were accompanied by increased microglial and astroglial cells within the vicinity of CA1‐Aβ‐burdened neurons and an increase in microglial reactivity. Overall, our findings highlight pathological mechanisms arising from the disruption of NA signalling and loss of LC‐noradrenergic innervation at the earliest stages of the human‐like AD neuropathology.
Bibliography:Funding information
Hélène Hall and Chiara Orciani contributed equally to the study.
McGill University; Canadian Institutes of Health Research
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ISSN:0305-1846
1365-2990
1365-2990
DOI:10.1111/nan.12835