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result(s) for
"Kramár, Enikö A"
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Systematic phenotyping and characterization of the 5xFAD mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease
2021
Mouse models of human diseases are invaluable tools for studying pathogenic mechanisms and testing interventions and therapeutics. For disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease in which numerous models are being generated, a challenging first step is to identify the most appropriate model and age to effectively evaluate new therapeutic approaches. Here we conducted a detailed phenotypic characterization of the 5xFAD model on a congenic C57BL/6 J strain background, across its lifespan – including a seldomly analyzed 18-month old time point to provide temporally correlated phenotyping of this model and a template for characterization of new models of LOAD as they are generated. This comprehensive analysis included quantification of plaque burden, Aβ biochemical levels, and neuropathology, neurophysiological measurements and behavioral and cognitive assessments, and evaluation of microglia, astrocytes, and neurons. Analysis of transcriptional changes was conducted using bulk-tissue generated RNA-seq data from microdissected cortices and hippocampi as a function of aging, which can be explored at the MODEL-AD Explorer and AD Knowledge Portal. This deep-phenotyping pipeline identified novel aspects of age-related pathology in the 5xFAD model.
Measurement(s)
Protein Expression • gene expression • electrophysiology data • protein measurement • behavior
Technology Type(s)
immunofluorescence microscopy assay • RNA sequencing • electrophysiology assay • Electrochemiluminescence Immunoassay • animal activity monitoring system
Factor Type(s)
genotype • age • sex
Sample Characteristic - Organism
Mus musculus
Machine-accessible metadata file describing the reported data:
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.15176109
Journal Article
The neuron-specific chromatin regulatory subunit BAF53b is necessary for synaptic plasticity and memory
by
Vogel-Ciernia, Annie
,
Lynch, Gary
,
Wu, Jiang I
in
631/378/1595/1554
,
631/378/1595/2167
,
631/378/2584
2013
BAF53b is a neuron-specific component of the nucleosome remodeling complex mSWI/SNF that allows euchromatin formation and provides epigenetic regulation of gene expression. Here, the authors generated BAF53b mutant and rescue mice to show that postnatal nucleosome modeling is crucial to hippocampal synaptic plasticity, neuronal morphology and memory performance.
Recent exome sequencing studies have implicated polymorphic Brg1-Associated Factor (BAF) complexes (mammalian SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complexes) in several human intellectual disabilities and cognitive disorders. However, it is currently unknown how mutations in BAF complexes result in impaired cognitive function. Postmitotic neurons express a neuron-specific assembly, nBAF, characterized by the neuron-specific subunit BAF53b. Mice harboring selective genetic manipulations of BAF53b have severe defects in long-term memory and long-lasting forms of hippocampal synaptic plasticity. We rescued memory impairments in BAF53b mutant mice by reintroducing BAF53b in the adult hippocampus, which suggests a role for BAF53b beyond neuronal development. The defects in BAF53b mutant mice appeared to derive from alterations in gene expression that produce abnormal postsynaptic components, such as spine structure and function, and ultimately lead to deficits in synaptic plasticity. Our results provide new insight into the role of dominant mutations in subunits of BAF complexes in human intellectual and cognitive disorders.
Journal Article
Epigenetic regulation of the circadian gene Per1 contributes to age-related changes in hippocampal memory
2018
Aging is accompanied by impairments in both circadian rhythmicity and long-term memory. Although it is clear that memory performance is affected by circadian cycling, it is unknown whether age-related disruption of the circadian clock causes impaired hippocampal memory. Here, we show that the repressive histone deacetylase HDAC3 restricts long-term memory, synaptic plasticity, and experience-induced expression of the circadian gene
Per1
in the aging hippocampus without affecting rhythmic circadian activity patterns. We also demonstrate that hippocampal
Per1
is critical for long-term memory formation. Together, our data challenge the traditional idea that alterations in the core circadian clock drive circadian-related changes in memory formation and instead argue for a more autonomous role for circadian clock gene function in hippocampal cells to gate the likelihood of long-term memory formation.
Circadian rhythms are known to modulate memory, but it’s not known whether clock genes in the hippocampus are required for memory consolidation. Here, the authors show that epigenetic regulation of clock gene Period1 in the hippocampus regulates memory and contributes to age-related memory decline, independent of circadian rhythms.
Journal Article
Systematic Phenotyping and Characterization of the 3xTg-AD Mouse Model of Alzheimer’s Disease
by
Neumann, Jonathan
,
da Cunha, Celia
,
Kramár, Enikö A
in
Alzheimer's disease
,
Animal models
,
Animals
2022
Animal models of disease are valuable resources for investigating pathogenic mechanisms and potential therapeutic interventions. However, for complex disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the generation and availability of innumerous distinct animal models present unique challenges to AD researchers and hinder the success of useful therapies. Here, we conducted an in-depth analysis of the 3xTg-AD mouse model of AD across its lifespan to better inform the field of the various pathologies that appear at specific ages, and comment on drift that has occurred in the development of pathology in this line since its development 20 years ago. This modern characterization of the 3xTg-AD model includes an assessment of impairments in long-term potentiation followed by quantification of amyloid beta (Aβ) plaque burden and neurofibrillary tau tangles, biochemical levels of Aβ and tau protein, and neuropathological markers such as gliosis and accumulation of dystrophic neurites. We also present a novel comparison of the 3xTg-AD model with the 5xFAD model using the same deep-phenotyping characterization pipeline and show plasma NfL is strongly driven by plaque burden. The results from these analyses are freely available via the AD Knowledge Portal (https://admodelexplorer.synapse.org). Our work demonstrates the utility of a characterization pipeline that generates robust and standardized information relevant to investigating and comparing disease etiologies of current and future models of AD.
Journal Article
Synaptic evidence for the efficacy of spaced learning
by
Gall, Christine M.
,
Kramár, Enikö A.
,
Lynch, Gary
in
Actins
,
Actins - metabolism
,
AMPA receptors
2012
The superiority of spaced vs. massed training is a fundamental feature of learning. Here, we describe unanticipated timing rules for the production of long-term potentiation (LTP) in adult rat hippocampal slices that can account for one temporal segment of the spaced trials phenomenon. Successive bouts of naturalistic theta burst stimulation of field CA1 afferents markedly enhanced previously saturated LTP if spaced apart by 1 h or longer, but were without effect when shorter intervals were used. Analyses of Factin-enriched spines to identify potentiated synapses indicated that the added LTP obtained with delayed theta trains involved recruitment of synapses that were \"missed\" by the first stimulation bout. Single spine glutamate-uncaging experiments confirmed that less than half of the spines in adult hippocampus are primed to undergo plasticity under baseline conditions, suggesting that intrinsic variability among individual synapses imposes a repetitive presentation requirement for maximizing the percentage of potentiated connections. We propose that a combination of local diffusion from initially modified spines coupled with much later membrane insertion events dictate that the repetitions be widely spaced. Thus, the synaptic mechanisms described here provide a neurobiological explanation for one component of a poorly understood, ubiquitous aspect of learning.
Journal Article
Specific exercise patterns generate an epigenetic molecular memory window that drives long-term memory formation and identifies ACVR1C as a bidirectional regulator of memory in mice
2024
Exercise has beneficial effects on cognition throughout the lifespan. Here, we demonstrate that specific exercise patterns transform insufficient, subthreshold training into long-term memory in mice. Our findings reveal a potential molecular memory window such that subthreshold training within this window enables long-term memory formation. We performed RNA-seq on dorsal hippocampus and identify genes whose expression correlate with conditions in which exercise enables long-term memory formation. Among these genes we found
Acvr1c
, a member of the TGF ß family. We find that exercise, in any amount, alleviates epigenetic repression at the
Acvr1c
promoter during consolidation. Additionally, we find that ACVR1C can bidirectionally regulate synaptic plasticity and long-term memory in mice. Furthermore,
Acvr1c
expression is impaired in the aging human and mouse brain, as well as in the 5xFAD mouse model, and over-expression of
Acvr1c
enables learning and facilitates plasticity in mice. These data suggest that promoting ACVR1C may protect against cognitive impairment.
Exercise has beneficial effects on cognition. Here, authors utilize an exercise model to show ACVR1C to be an essential bidirectional regulator of memory and synaptic plasticity in adult, aging and 5xFAD mice beyond the context of exercise.
Journal Article
BDNF rescues BAF53b-dependent synaptic plasticity and cocaine-associated memory in the nucleus accumbens
by
White, André O.
,
Kramár, Enikö A.
,
Blurton-Jones, Mathew
in
13/51
,
631/378/1595
,
631/378/2591
2016
Recent evidence implicates epigenetic mechanisms in drug-associated memory processes. However, a possible role for one major epigenetic mechanism, nucleosome remodelling, in drug-associated memories remains largely unexplored. Here we examine mice with genetic manipulations targeting a neuron-specific nucleosome remodelling complex subunit, BAF53b. These mice display deficits in cocaine-associated memory that are more severe in BAF53b transgenic mice compared with BAF53b heterozygous mice. Similar to the memory deficits, theta-induced long-term potentiation (theta-LTP) in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) is significantly impaired in slices taken from BAF53b transgenic mice but not heterozygous mice. Further experiments indicate that theta-LTP in the NAc is dependent on TrkB receptor activation, and that BDNF rescues theta-LTP and cocaine-associated memory deficits in BAF53b transgenic mice. Together, these results suggest a role for BAF53b in NAc neuronal function required for cocaine-associated memories, and also that BDNF/TrkB activation in the NAc may overcome memory and plasticity deficits linked to BAF53b mutations.
Epigenetic mechanisms play a key role in drug-associated memories and behaviors. Here authors show that mice deficient of BAF53b, a nucleosome remodeling complex subunit, display deficits in synaptic plasticity and cocaine-associated memory, both of which can be rescued by BDNF application.
Journal Article
A Trem2R47H mouse model without cryptic splicing drives age- and disease-dependent tissue damage and synaptic loss in response to plaques
by
Tran, Kristine M.
,
Gantuz, Magdalena
,
Arreola, Miguel A.
in
Advertising executives
,
Alleles
,
Alzheimer's disease
2023
Background
The TREM2 R47H variant is one of the strongest genetic risk factors for late-onset Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). Unfortunately, many current
Trem2
R47H
mouse models are associated with cryptic mRNA splicing of the mutant allele that produces a confounding reduction in protein product. To overcome this issue, we developed the
Trem2
R47H NSS
(
N
ormal
S
plice
S
ite) mouse model in which the
Trem2
allele is expressed at a similar level to the wild-type
Trem2
allele without evidence of cryptic splicing products.
Methods
Trem2
R47H NSS
mice were treated with the demyelinating agent cuprizone, or crossed with the 5xFAD mouse model of amyloidosis, to explore the impact of the TREM2 R47H variant on inflammatory responses to demyelination, plaque development, and the brain’s response to plaques.
Results
Trem2
R47H NSS
mice display an appropriate inflammatory response to cuprizone challenge, and do not recapitulate the null allele in terms of impeded inflammatory responses to demyelination. Utilizing the 5xFAD mouse model, we report age- and disease-dependent changes in
Trem2
R47H NSS
mice in response to development of AD-like pathology. At an early (4-month-old) disease stage, hemizygous 5xFAD/homozygous
Trem2
R47H NSS
(5xFAD/
Trem2
R47H NSS
) mice have reduced size and number of microglia that display impaired interaction with plaques compared to microglia in age-matched 5xFAD hemizygous controls. This is associated with a suppressed inflammatory response but increased dystrophic neurites and axonal damage as measured by plasma neurofilament light chain (NfL) level. Homozygosity for
Trem2
R47H NSS
suppressed LTP deficits and loss of presynaptic puncta caused by the 5xFAD transgene array in 4-month-old mice. At a more advanced (12-month-old) disease stage 5xFAD/
Trem2
R47H NSS
mice no longer display impaired plaque-microglia interaction or suppressed inflammatory gene expression, although NfL levels remain elevated, and a unique interferon-related gene expression signature is seen. Twelve-month old
Trem2
R47H NSS
mice also display LTP deficits and postsynaptic loss.
Conclusions
The
Trem2
R47H NSS
mouse is a valuable model that can be used to investigate age-dependent effects of the AD-risk R47H mutation on TREM2 and microglial function including its effects on plaque development, microglial-plaque interaction, production of a unique interferon signature and associated tissue damage.
Journal Article
Integrin-Driven Actin Polymerization Consolidates Long-Term Potentiation
by
Gall, Christine M.
,
Kramár, Enikö A.
,
Lynch, Gary
in
Actins
,
Actins - metabolism
,
Actins - physiology
2006
Long-term potentiation (LTP), like memory, becomes progressively more resistant to disruption with time after its formation. Here we show that threshold conditions for inducing LTP cause a rapid, long-lasting increase in polymerized filamentous actin in dendritic spines of adult hippocampus. Two independent manipulations that reverse LTP disrupted this effect when applied shortly after induction but not 30 min later. Function-blocking antibodies to β1 family integrins selectively eliminated both actin polymerization and stabilization of LTP. We propose that the initial stages of consolidation involve integrin-driven events common to cells engaged in activities that require rapid morphological changes.
Journal Article
BIN1K358R suppresses glial response to plaques in mouse model of Alzheimer's disease
by
Milinkeviciute, Giedre
,
Kawauchi, Shimako
,
Walker, Amber
in
Adapter proteins
,
Age of onset
,
Alzheimer's disease
2024
INTRODUCTION The BIN1 coding variant rs138047593 (K358R) is linked to Late‐Onset Alzheimer's Disease (LOAD) via targeted exome sequencing. METHODS To elucidate the functional consequences of this rare coding variant on brain amyloidosis and neuroinflammation, we generated BIN1K358R knock‐in mice using CRISPR/Cas9 technology. These mice were subsequently bred with 5xFAD transgenic mice, which serve as a model for Alzheimer's pathology. RESULTS The presence of the BIN1K358R variant leads to increased cerebral amyloid deposition, with a dampened response of astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, but not microglia, at both the cellular and transcriptional levels. This correlates with decreased neurofilament light chain in both plasma and brain tissue. Synaptic densities are significantly increased in both wild‐type and 5xFAD backgrounds homozygous for the BIN1K358R variant. DISCUSSION The BIN1 K358R variant modulates amyloid pathology in 5xFAD mice, attenuates the astrocytic and oligodendrocytic responses to amyloid plaques, decreases damage markers, and elevates synaptic densities. Highlights BIN1 rs138047593 (K358R) coding variant is associated with increased risk of LOAD. BIN1 K358R variant increases amyloid plaque load in 12‐month‐old 5xFAD mice. BIN1 K358R variant dampens astrocytic and oligodendrocytic response to plaques. BIN1 K358R variant decreases neuronal damage in 5xFAD mice. BIN1 K358R upregulates synaptic densities and modulates synaptic transmission.
Journal Article