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The Journal of Neuroscience, September 1, 2000, 20(17):6452-6458
Aging Increased Amyloid Peptide and Caused Amyloid Plaques in
Brain of Old APP/V717I Transgenic Mice by a Different Mechanism than
Mutant Presenilin1
Ilse
Dewachter1,
Jo
Van Dorpe1,
Liesbet
Smeijers1,
Martine
Gilis1,
Cuno
Kuipéri1,
Isabelle
Laenen1,
Nathalie
Caluwaerts1,
Dieder
Moechars4,
Frédéric
Checler2,
Hugo
Vanderstichele3, and
Fred
Van
Leuven1
1 Experimental Genetics Group, Center for Human
Genetics, Flemish Institute for Biotechnology, Katholieke Universiteit
Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium, 2 Institut de Pharmacologie
Moléculaire et Cellulaire/Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique, Unité Propre de Recherche 411, Valbonne 06560, France, 3 Innogenetics NV, Industriepark Zwijnaarde, 9052 Gent, Belgium, and 4 Janssen Research Foundation, 2340 Beerse, Belgium
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ABSTRACT |
Aging of transgenic mice that overexpress the London mutant of
amyloid precursor protein (APP/V717I) (Moechars et al., 1999a ) was now
demonstrated not to affect the normalized levels of - or -cleaved
secreted APP nor of the -C-terminal stubs. This indicated that aging
did not markedly disturb either - or -secretase cleavage of APP
and failed to explain the origin of the massive amounts of amyloid
peptides A 40 and A 42, soluble and precipitated as amyloid plaques
in the brain of old APP/V717I transgenic mice. We tested the hypothesis
that aging acted on presenilin1 (PS1) to affect -secretase-mediated
production of amyloid peptides by comparing aged APP/V717I transgenic
mice to double transgenic mice coexpressing human PS1 and APP/V717I. In
double transgenic mice with mutant (A246E) but not wild-type human PS1,
brain amyloid peptide levels increased and resulted in amyloid plaques
when the mice were only 6-9 months old, much earlier than in APP/V717I transgenic mice (12-15 months old). Mutant PS1 increased mainly brain
A 42 levels, whereas in aged APP/V717I transgenic mice, both A 42
and A 40 increased. This resulted in a dramatic difference in the
A 42/A 40 ratio of precipitated or plaque-associated amyloid peptides, i.e., 3.11 ± 0.22 in double APP/V717I × PS1/A246E
transgenic mice compared with 0.43 ± 0.07 in aged APP/V717I
transgenic mice, and demonstrated a clear difference between the effect
of aging and the effect of the insertion of a mutant PS1 transgene. In conclusion, we demonstrate that aging did not favor amyloidogenic over
nonamyloidogenic processing of APP, nor did it exert a mutant PS1-like
effect on -secretase. Therefore, the data are interpreted to suggest
that parenchymal and vascular accumulation of amyloid in aging brain
resulted from failure to clear the amyloid peptides rather than from
increased production.
Key words:
amyloid precursor protein; APP processing; aging; presenilin; transgenic mice; amyloid plaques; amyloid peptide
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INTRODUCTION |
Amyloid peptides accumulate in
parenchymal plaques and vascular deposits that constitute the major
postmortem pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Clinical
mutations in the genes coding for amyloid precursor protein (APP) or
presenilins (PS1 and PS2) cause early-onset familial AD (EOFAD) (Hardy,
1997 ; Selkoe, 1998 ) and affect the proteolytic processing of APP
directly to yield more amyloidogenic peptides. However, EOFAD accounts for only a minority of AD cases, while aging remains the most prevailing risk factor for AD. The effect of the mutations on the
processing of APP and on amyloid peptide formation has been extensively
studied in cells and models, including transgenic mice. The effects of
aging remain, however, less well explored.
Different transgenic mice that overexpress wild-type (wt) or mutant
(Mut) APP, PS1, or PS2 have been generated and some recapitulate the
amyloid aspects of AD pathology very well, although lacking neurofibrillary tangles. In principle, these models allow analysis of
the effect of aging on APP processing and its role in amyloid peptide
accumulation and deposition. Double transgenic mice that coexpress APP
and presenilin demonstrated that PS1 mutants essentially increase
production of A 42 (Borchelt et al., 1996 ; Duff et al., 1996 ; Citron
et al., 1997 ) and cause early development of amyloid plaques as in
EOFAD (Borchelt et al., 1997 ; Holcomb et al., 1998 ) as originally
observed in cell biological models (for review, see Selkoe, 1998 ).
Previously, we have generated and characterized transgenic mice that
overexpress human APP in their central neurons, causing early
behavioral and phenotypic changes, including cognitive impairment with
decreased long-term potentiation (Moechars et al., 1996 , 1998a ,b ,
1999a ,b ). For further studies, we have selected the transgenic mouse
line that overexpressed the "London" mutant of APP (APP/V717I) (for
review, see Hardy, 1997 ) because these develop later in life abundant amyloid plaques in brain parenchyma (Moechars et al., 1999a ),
as well as vascular deposits (Van Dorpe et al., 2000 ).
In the current study, we have biochemically analyzed the effect of
aging on the pathologically relevant derivatives of APP in the brain of
APP/V717I transgenic mice. Increase in the soluble and precipitated
amyloid peptides A 40 and A 42 and in the A 42/A 40 ratio was
marked between the ages of 12 and 15 months. Aging did not, however,
alter the normalized levels of either - or -secretase-cleaved APP
(APPs and APPs ) nor those of the C-terminal "stubs" resulting from -cleavage of APP ( -C stubs). This excluded a major
alteration in relative - and -secretase cleavage of APP as the
cause of amyloid accumulation in aging brain.
Because -secretase is controlled by or identical to PS1 (De Strooper
et al., 1998 ; Wolfe et al., 1999 ; Kimberly et al., 2000 ; Li et
al., 2000 ; Selkoe and Wolfe, 2000 ), we have comparatively analyzed the effect of aging and the effect of PS1 on amyloid peptide
accumulation. In the brain of double transgenic mice, i.e.,
APP/V717I × PS1/A246E, we observed mainly an increase in A 42,
resulting in earlier plaque formation, by predominant A 42 deposition. In contrast, both A 40 and A 42 peptides increased with
aging, and A 40 peptides remained the most preponderant precipitated peptide in brain of aged APP/V717I transgenic mice. Combined, this resulted in an ~10-fold difference in the A 42/A 40 ratio of
precipitated amyloid peptides in double transgenic mice compared with
aged APP/V717I transgenic mice. Because aging did not affect - or
-secretase cleavage or exert a presenilin mutant-like effect on
-secretase, we hypothesize that the accumulation of amyloid was
attributable to failing clearance and degradation in aging brain.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Transgenic mice. All transgenic mice used in this
study were of the FVB/N genetic background and expressed APP/V717I,
PS1, or both under control of the mouse thy1 gene
promoter. The APP/V717I transgenic mice (Moechars et al., 1999a ) and
the PS1 transgenic mice were derived essentially as described
previously (Moechars et al., 1996 ). Briefly, cDNA coding for wild-type
human PS1 and mutant PS1/A246E were blunted and ligated into a
XhoI site created in an adapted mouse thy1 gene
(Moechars et al., 1996 ). In the final construct, coding sequences and
introns 2 and 3 of the mouse thy1 gene are replaced, leaving
the 5' neuron-specific control elements intact. Linearized mini-gene
constructs were microinjected into prenuclear embryos from
superovulated FVB/N females and transgenic founders identified by
Southern blotting of tail-biopt DNA by standard procedures
(Moechars et al., 1996 ). Transgenic strains that transmitted the
transgene in a strictly mendelian manner without integration-site
effects were compared, and high expressing strains were selected after
Western blotting of brain extracts. Double transgenic mice
overexpressing APP/V717I and either PS1/mutant or PS1/wt were obtained
by crossbreeding of single APP/V717I and PS1 mutant or wild-type
transgenic mice.
Biochemical analysis of transgenic mouse brain. Brains of
heterozygous APP/V717I transgenic mice or of double transgenic
APP/V717I × PS1 mice were prelevated. One hemisphere was
snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen for biochemical analysis, and the other
hemisphere was fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for immunohistochemistry.
Differential extraction was performed to isolate fractions containing
soluble proteins, membrane proteins, and insoluble or
"plaque"-associated proteins. To this end, individual
hemispheres were homogenized in 6.5 vol of ice-cold buffer containing
20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, and a cocktail of
proteinase inhibitors (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany)
using a small potter-type mechanical homogenizer. After centrifugation
(135,000 × g for 1 hr at 4°C), a portion of the
supernatant was cleared again (200,000 × g for 2 hr at 4°C) before analysis of soluble amyloid peptides by specified ELISA.
The pellet from the first centrifugation was resuspended and extracted
in 15 vol of ice-cold buffer containing 10 mM
Tris-HCl, pH 7.6, 150 mM sodium chloride, 2%
Triton X-100, 2% Nonidet P-40, and the cocktail of proteinase
inhibitors. After centrifugation (100,000 × g for 1 hr
at 4°C) the supernatant ("membrane" fraction) was used for
analysis of membrane-bound proteins, and the residual pellet was
resuspended and extracted in guanidinium buffer with a final
concentration of 50 mM Tris and 5 M guanidinium chloride, pH 8.0. This extract was
used to measure levels of insoluble or plaque-associated A 40 and
A 42 levels by specified ELISA as detailed below.
Western blotting of membrane-bound APP,
APPs , APPs , and the
-C stubs. Biochemical analysis of intact
membrane-bound APP (APPm), APPs , APPs , and the -C stubs
was essentially performed as described previously (Moechars et al.,
1999a ) with minor modifications. APPm was measured on the membrane
fraction by Western blotting with monoclonal antibody 1G5 (Athena
Neurosciences, San Francisco, CA). APPs was measured in the soluble
protein fraction by Western blotting with the polyclonal antibody
R1736, recognizing an epitope between the - and -secretase
cleavage sites [amino acids (aa) 595-611] (Haass et al.,
1992 ). APPs was detected in the soluble protein fraction by Western
blotting with the polyclonal antibody Ab53 (Howland et al., 1995 ).
Briefly, samples of the fractions were treated to contain at a final
concentration 2% SDS and 1% 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME), and the
proteins were denatured by incubation at 95°C for 10 min. After
separation on polyacrylamide gels (8% Tris-glycine; Novex, San Diego,
CA), proteins were electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose
membranes (Hybond-ECL; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little
Chalfont, UK), and Western blotting was performed exactly as described
previously (Moechars et al., 1999a ). The -C stubs were
immunoprecipitated from the membrane fraction with the polyclonal
antibody B717 raised against the human amyloid peptide (aa 597-612)
(De Strooper et al., 1995 ). After incubation overnight with antiserum
and protein G-Sepharose, the collected pellets were washed, denatured,
reduced, and separated on 4-12% Nu-Page gels (Novex). After transfer
to nitrocellulose membranes, -C stubs were detected by Western
blotting with antibody WO2 (Ida et al., 1996 ). After incubation with
appropriate secondary antibodies, all Western blots were developed with
the ECL detection system and photographically recorded (Hyperfilm;
Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, UK). Quantitative analysis
was performed by application on each gel of at least three serial
dilutions of a standardized pooled extract treated exactly as the
experimental samples, allowing standardization and normalization
between gels and between experiments.
Densitometric scanning of films and calculation and normalization was
performed as described previously (Moechars et al., 1999a ) using a
flatbed optical density scanner and dedicated software for analysis and
measurement (Image Master; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala,
Sweden). In all experiments and assays, extraction of membrane proteins
from brain was additionally verified by measuring the membrane-bound 85 kDa subunit of the low density lipoprotein receptor-related
protein (LRP) as an internal control. LRP is a membrane protein
unrelated to APP and also ubiquitously expressed in brain. The specific
antiserum F36/4 was raised against a synthetic peptide representing the
ultimate 12 amino acids from its C-terminal domain.
Western blotting of neprilysin and presenilin1. For
detection of neprilysin, proteins of the membrane protein fraction were denatured and reduced by boiling in sample buffer containing 2% SDS
and 1% 2-ME and separated on an 8% Tris-glycine gel (Novex). Detection was done by Western blotting with the monoclonal antibody 56C6 (Novocastra Laboratories, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK) (Iwata et al.,
2000 ). For detection of PS1 protein, brains were homogenized in sucrose
buffer [5 mM Tris, 250 mM
sucrose, 1 mM EGTA, pH 7.4, and a cocktail of
proteinase inhibitors (Boehringer Mannheim)] with a potter homogenize
and spun at 12,000 × g at 4°C for 10 min. The
supernatant was taken and further centrifuged for 30 min at
100,000 × g at 4°C. Proteins were denatured and
reduced by boiling in sample buffer containing a final concentration of 2% SDS and 1% 2-ME separated on 4-20% Tris-glycine gels (Novex). N-
and C-terminal fragments of PS1 were detected with the polyclonal antibodies B14/5 and B17/2, respectively (De Strooper et al., 1997 ).
ELISA for soluble and plaque-associated amyloid peptides.
The extracted protein fractions were applied on small reversed phase columns (C18-Sep-pack cartridges; Waters Associates, Milford, MA) and
washed with increasing concentrations of acetonitrile (5, 25, and 50%)
containing 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid. The last fraction
contained the amyloid peptides, was dried in vacuum overnight, and
dissolved for measurements in ELISA. Sandwich ELISA for A 40 and
A 42 peptides was performed using the capture antisera CFA3340 (Barelli et al., 1997 ) and 21F12, respectively, and were developed with
the biotinylated monoclonal antibody 3D6 (De Strooper et al., 1998 ;
Vanderstichele et al., 1998 ). These ELISA techniques are
essentially the same tests as used for diagnostic purposes, with only
minor modifications of the initial sample preparation.
In situ hybridization. Paraffin sections (6 µm) of double
(APP/V717I × PS1/Mut) transgenic mice and nontransgenic mice were transferred on silanylated glass slides, dewaxed, and rehydrated through an ethanol series. Sections were digested with proteinase K (20 µg/ml), post-fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, and treated with 0.25%
acetic anhydride in 0.1 mol/l triethanolamine-HCl. Sections were
hybridized overnight in 50% demonized formamide, 0.3 mol/l NaCl, 20 mmol/l Tris-HCl, and 5 mmol/l EDTA, pH 8.0, with 10% dextran sulfate,
1× Denhardt's solution, 0.5 mg/ml yeast RNA, and 10 mmol/l
dithiothreitol and supplemented with the appropriate radiolabeled
riboprobe. After stringency washes and ribonuclease A treatment,
sections were dehydrated and dipped in photographic emulsion (LM-1;
Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, UK) and exposed for 1 week. For synthesis of the sense and antisense PS1 RNA, a 221 bp PCR
product from exon 7 of the presenilin1 gene was cloned in a pGEM-T
vector (Promega, Madison, WI). The sense and antisense human APP RNA
probes used were synthesized from a pGEM-T vector (Promega) in which a
263 bp PCR product from the human APP gene was cloned. The sequences of
the upper and the lower primer used in the PCR were
5'-GACTCATGGTGGGCGGTGTTGT-3' and 5'-CCGATGGGTAGTGAAG CAATGGTT-3',
respectively. The plasmid was linearized with either NotI or
SphI and transcribed with T7 and SP6RNA polymerase,
respectively, in the presence of
[33P]UTP.
Histology and immunohistochemistry. Brain tissue was fixed
overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde at 4°C, rinsed in PBS, dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, and sectioned. Immunohistochemistry was performed
on dewaxed sections after rehydration and quenching of endogenous
peroxidase (1% hydrogen peroxide in 50% methanol, 30 min, room
temperature). Immunostaining for the amyloid peptides was performed
with antibody FCA18 (Barelli et al., 1997 ) after microwave treatment of
the sections in 10 mM sodium citrate, pH 6, for 8 min at an output of 450 W. After incubation for 1 hr in blocking buffer
(10% goat serum in 10 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 0.15 M NaCl, and 0.1% Triton X-100),
appropriately diluted primary antibody was applied and incubated
overnight at room temperature. After rinsing and incubation with
appropriate secondary antibodies (1 hr, room temperature), immune
complexes were detected by incubation with diaminobenzidine and
hydrogenperoxide (Moechars et al., 1999a ). Thioflavine S
staining was performed on paraffin sections according to standard protocols.
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RESULTS |
Brain amyloid peptides in aging APP/V717I transgenic mice
Brain amyloid peptides A 40 and A 42 were measured by
specified ELISA on protein fractions, differentially extracted from brain of APP/V717I transgenic mice to represent soluble and
plaque-associated amyloid peptides. Biochemical analysis on one
hemisphere was paralleled by immunohistochemistry on the other
hemisphere to define the extent of the pathology in the different age
groups (Moechars et al., 1999a ; Van Dorpe et al., 2000 ).
Compared with older mice, the levels of soluble A 40 and A 42 were
relatively low in young APP/V717I transgenic mice of 3 and 6-9 months
of age, with a similar A 42/A 40 ratio of <0.4 (Fig.
1A). In APP/V717I
transgenic mice of 15 months of age, the soluble amyloid peptides were
increased with an order of magnitude compared with young mice, with the
most pronounced increase in A 42 as reflected in the A 42/A 40
ratio of 0.67 ± 0.08 (Fig. 1A). The levels of
plaque peptides, operationally defined as extracted with the chaotrope
guanidinium chloride, increased exponentially in the brain of old mice
(Fig. 1B), which is evidently the biochemical equivalent of amyloid plaque deposition as detected histochemically (Fig. 2) (Moechars et al., 1999a ; Van
Dorpe et al., 2000 ). Again, the relative increase was most pronounced
for A 42, whereas A 40 remained the predominant peptide (Fig.
1B).

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Figure 1.
Soluble and insoluble amyloid peptides in brain of
aging APP/V717I transgenic mice. Concentrations of soluble
(A) and precipitated or plaque-associated
(B) amyloid peptides, i.e., A 40
(gray bars) and A 42 (black
bars), were measured by specific ELISA, and results are
expressed as nanogram peptide per gram brain tissue. The ratio of the
concentrations, i.e., A 42/A 40 of both soluble and precipitated
amyloid peptides, was calculated (A and
B, right). All histograms represent the
mean with SEM of at least four transgenic mice in each age group.
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Figure 2.
Immunohistochemical staining with antibody FCA18
of brain sections of single APP/V717I transgenic mice and double
APP/V717I × PS1/A246E transgenic mice. Amyloid plaques in
subiculum of double transgenic mouse at 8 months of age
(A) and in subiculum (B)
and cortex (C) at 13 months of age. Amyloid
plaques in subiculum (D) of APP/V717I transgenic
mouse (15 months) and in subiculum (E) and cortex
(F) of APP/V717I transgenic mouse (18 months).
G is higher magnification to illustrate the typical
neuritic plaques with a dense core as described previously (Moechars et
al., 1999a ; Van Dorpe et al., 2000 ). H is an example of
a typical thioflavine S-stained plaque, abundantly present in the brain
of single and double transgenic mice (Van Dorpe et al., 2000 ).
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The data demonstrated that aging of the APP/V717I transgenic mice
recapitulated the increase in soluble amyloid peptides (Lue et al.,
1999 ; Teller et al., 1996 ), as well as the exponential increase in
precipitated amyloid peptides (Funato et al., 1998 ; Lue et al., 1999 )
as reported in AD patients. The current data extend the findings
obtained in two other unrelated APP transgenic mice (Hsiao et al.,
1996 ; Johnson-Wood et al., 1997 ).
Brain APPm, APPs , APPs , and -C stubs in aging APP/V717I
transgenic mice
To determine how aging affected the processing of APP, we measured
brain levels of membrane-bound APPm of - and -secreted APP
(APPs and APPs ) and the cellular -C stubs resulting from -cleavage of APPm (Selkoe, 1998 ). Previously, we demonstrated that
brain levels of mRNA coding for endogenous mouse APP and for transgenic
APP increased slightly with age (Moechars et al., 1996 , 1999b ). This
was now extended to the protein level, because membrane-bound APP
protein was found to increase with age (Fig. 3A), similar to and in close
parallel with mRNA levels (Moechars et al., 1999b ). This increase was
specific for APP, because the level of the 85 kDa subunit of the LRP
remained constant (Fig. 3A). LRP was considered a suitable
internal control because it is unrelated to APP and is also a large
membrane-bound protein, ubiquitously expressed in neurons.
Normalization for the difference in expression of APPm in all mice in
all age groups demonstrated that neither the secreted APPs (Fig.
3B) and APPs (Fig. 3C) nor the cellular -C
stubs (Fig. 3D) were affected by aging in APP/V717I
transgenic mice.

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Figure 3.
Biochemical analysis of APP intermediates in brain
of APP/V717I transgenic mice. Brain of heterozygous APP/V717I
transgenic mice (APP) of different age groups was
analyzed for the APP intermediates, indicated in each
panel, by Western blotting with the indicated antibodies
and representatively illustrated (right column). All the
levels are expressed relative to those in brain of the youngest
APP/V717I transgenic mice analyzed, i.e., 3 months old. In
A-D, the primary concentrations as measured
(left) were normalized to the level of expression of the
membrane-bound APPm (middle). All histograms represent
the mean with SEM of at least four transgenic mice in each age group.
The Western blots also illustrate serial dilutions of a standardized
pooled extract as applied on each gel to allow normalization.
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Surprisingly then, the current data indicated that aging did not favor
- over -secretase cleavage of APPm to produce more of the -C
stubs that are the obligatory precursors of the amyloid peptides
(Selkoe, 1998 ). This left the possibility that increased amyloid
peptide concentration and deposition was attributable to altered
-secretase activity.
Because mutant presenilins that cause familial early-onset AD have been
proposed to affect -secretase activity (Borchelt et al., 1996 ; Duff
et al., 1996 ; Scheuner et al., 1996 ; Borchelt et al., 1997 ; Citron et
al., 1997 ; Holcomb et al., 1998 ), we tested the hypothesis that aging
disturbed APP metabolism at the -secretase step as controlled by PS1.
Double transgenic mice coexpressing APP/V717I and wild-type or
mutant human PS1
Transgenic mice were generated that express human wild-type PS1 or
the EOFAD mutant PS1/A246E under the transcriptional control of the
mouse thy1 gene promoter, in the FVB/N mouse genetic
background, the same strategy as used to generate the APP/V717I
transgenic mice (Fig.
4A) (Moechars et al.,
1999a ). This warranted coexpression of the transgenes in the same
cells, namely neurons (Fig. 4C). Three and six
founders were generated for PS1 and PS1/A246E, respectively, that
stably transmitted and expressed the transgenes (Fig. 4). Western
blotting demonstrated normal and complete processing by the presence of
C- and N-terminal fragments of human wild-type and mutant PS1 (Fig.
4D). For the purpose of the current experiments, wild-type and mutant PS1 transgenic mice were crossed with the APP/V717I transgenic mice, and double transgenic mice were identified by standard methods of genotyping (Moechars et al., 1999a ).

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Figure 4.
Generation and characterization of wild-type
and mutant PS1 transgenic mice. A, Schematic
representation of the mouse thy1 gene promoter
construct, with the APP cDNA, the wild-type PS1 cDNA, or mutant PS1
cDNA. B, Northern blotting of total brain RNA from
heterozygous PS1 transgenic mice of line PS1/Wt/7 (lane
1), PS1/Wt/8 (lane 2), PS1/Wt/9 (lane
3), PS1/Mut/2 (lane 4), PS1/Mut/4
(lane 5), PS1/Mut/6 (lane 6), and
a nontransgenic FVB/N control mouse (lane 7). In
transgenic mice, the endogenous PS1 transcript of 2.7 kb and the
transgene transcript of 4.1 kb are detected with a PS1 probe
(B, right), with the larger size
attributable to the 5' and 3' untranslated regions of the
thy1 gene. Detection with a mouse thy1
gene exon 4 probe (B, left) (1.4 kb
ApaI fragment) detected the 1.9 kb Thy-1 mRNA and the
4.1 kb PS1 mRNA. C, In situ hybridization
with a murine PS1 probe (left panels) and a human APP
probe (right panels) of brain sections of double
(APP/V717I × PS1/Mut) transgenic (top panels) and
nontransgenic (bottom panels) mice reveals
overexpression of presenilin1 and expression of human APP in neurons of
the hippocampus (CA1) and cortex. D, Western blot with
specified antibodies for the C-terminal fragments (~20 kDa) and
N-terminal fragments (~30 kDa) of human PS1 (De Strooper et al.,
1997 ) in extracts of brain from heterozygous wild-type PS1 (PS1/Wt/7)
and homozygous mutant PS1 (PS1/Mut/2) mice.
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In double transgenic mice, overexpression of EOFAD mutant PS1 but not
human wild-type PS1 increased the A 42/A 40 ratio, even in young
mice, as observed by others (Borchelt et al., 1996 ; Duff et al., 1996 ;
Citron et al., 1997 ) (Fig.
5A). We further confirmed that
amyloid deposition occurred at the younger age of 6-9 months in double
transgenic mice with mutant PS1 compared with 12-15 months in single
APP/V717I transgenic mice (Fig. 2) (Moechars et al., 1999a ; Van Dorpe
et al., 2000 ).

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Figure 5.
Comparative analysis of levels of soluble and
plaque-associated amyloid peptides in the brain of single APP/V717I and
double APP/V717I × PS1/A246E transgenic mice. A,
Ratio of soluble A 42/A 40 in brain of 6-week-old single APP/V717I
(APP) and double transgenic mice, coexpressing APP/V717I
with either wild-type PS1 (APP×PS1/wt) or mutant PS1
(APP×PS1/Mut). B, Levels of soluble
A 40 (gray bars) and A 42 (black
bars) in the brain of single APP/V717I (APP) and
double APP/V717I × PS1/Mut (APP×PS) transgenic
mice, all 6-9 months old, and their ratio as calculated
(C). D, Levels of
plaque-associated A 40 (gray bars) and A 42
(black bars) in single and double transgenic mice, all
6-9 months old. E, Comparison of the A 42/A 40
ratio of insoluble amyloid peptides in brain of single (APP/V717I)
15-month-old and double transgenic (APP/V717I×PS1/Mut)
6- to 9-month-old mice (at a comparable stage of amyloid plaque
formation). All peptides were measured by specified ELISA and are shown
as absolute levels (nanograms per gram of wet brain tissue)
(left) and the ratio of A 42/A 40 calculated
(right). All histograms represent the mean with SEM of
at least three transgenic mice in each group.
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Brain amyloid peptides and APP metabolites in aging double
transgenic mice
Double transgenic mice, i.e., APP/V717I × PS1/A246E,
differed in three major aspects from single APP/V717I transgenic mice when comparatively analyzed at the ages of 6-9 and 15 months, respectively (Fig. 5). First, mutant PS1 hardly affected A 40 but
considerably increased the level of A 42 when single and double transgenic mice of the same age were compared (Fig. 5B). The
A 42/A 40 ratio of soluble peptides increased from 0.30 ± 0.04 to 0.96 ± 0.06, respectively, in single and double
transgenic mice of 6-9 months of age (Fig. 5C). Second,
plaque-associated amyloid peptides were undetectable in single
APP/V717I transgenic mice at the age of 6-9 months but were
dramatically high in the brain of double transgenic mice (Fig.
5D). Again, this is the evident biochemical correlate of the
much earlier development of amyloid plaques in the double transgenic
mice (Fig. 2). Finally, the most clear-cut demonstration of the effect
of mutant PS1 was the completely inversed ratio of plaque A
peptides. A 42 was predominant in the plaques of double transgenic
mice at 6-9 months of age compared with A 40 in those of single
APP/V717I transgenic mice at 15 months. This was most clearly marked by
the exceptionally high plaque A 42/A 40 ratio of 3.11 ± 0.22 in double transgenic mice compared with 0.43 ± 0.07 in single
APP/V717I transgenic mice (Fig. 5E).
The marked differences in APP metabolism in the brain of the double
mutant APP × PS1 transgenic mice argued strongly for the thesis
that aging in the single APP/V717I transgenic mice was mechanistically
different from the effect exerted by the coexpression of the mutant PS1 transgene.
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DISCUSSION |
In summary, we have demonstrated that none of the known
metabolites of APP, i.e., APPm, APPs , APPs , and the -C stubs,
correlated with the dramatic increased levels of the amyloid peptides
A 40 and A 42, soluble or precipitated as amyloid plaques, in the
brain of aging APP/V717I transgenic mice. We tested and refuted the hypothesis that aging acted by presenilin1 as or on the elusive -secretase to increase production of amyloid peptides by analyzing double transgenic mice. In this respect, it must be stressed that, in
the double transgenic mice, the pathological impact of the combination
was evident; in the brain of double transgenic mice containing mutant
PS1, but not wild-type human PS1, the formation of amyloid plaques was
already observed from 6 months of age onward. Biochemically, we have
confirmed and extended findings in other transgenic mice (Borchelt et
al., 1996 , 1997 ; Duff et al., 1996 ; Citron et al., 1997 ; Holcomb et
al., 1998 ) that this was specifically attributable to increased
accumulation of A 42 at this earlier age. This confirmed in
vivo the original defined cell biological effect of the EOFAD PS1
mutations on APP metabolism (Citron et al., 1998 ) (for review, see
Selkoe, 1998 )
In the absence of any indication for a major metabolic shift to the
amyloidogenic pathway, aging must be proposed to act otherwise. The
hypothesis developed during the course of this work that clearance and
degradation of amyloid peptides rather than increased production was
the primary problem in the brain of aging APP/V717I transgenic mice.
This coincided with renewed emphasis on degradation and clearance of
amyloid peptides (Glabe, 2000 ) after the identification of neprilysin
as a potential candidate proteinase (Iwata et al., 2000 ). Judged from
Western blots, the level of neprilysin was, however, not decreased in
the brain of aged APP/V717I transgenic mice (Fig.
6). Evidently, many other proteinases,
e.g., insulin degrading enzyme (Vekrellis et al., 2000 ) or proteinase
inhibitors, as well as clearance mediated by diverse carrier proteins
and receptors, could become functionally or structurally compromised with aging and alone or in combination explain our observations. The
great diversity of potential candidates will make it difficult to
define their functional importance and identity.

View larger version (25K):
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|
Figure 6.
Western blotting for neprilysin in brain of
aging APP/V717I transgenic mice. Western blotting on membrane proteins
extracted from brain of nontransgenic FVB/N mice
(A) and APP/V717I transgenic mice
(B) at the indicated ages. The Western blots also
illustrate serial dilutions of a standardized pooled extract as applied
on each gel to allow normalization.
|
|
On the other hand, it is conceivable that effective removal of amyloid
peptides could involve or be mediated by many different intracellular
and extracellular proteins. The genetic and epidemiological evidence
for the involvement in or association with sporadic or late onset AD of
many different genes, encoding a functional wide variety of proteins,
would find a plausible explanation in this hypothesis. This also might
functionally connect with the proven involvement of apolipoprotein E,
and eventually even of -2-macroglobulin, and their common receptor
in brain, the LRP. Other mechanisms are likely at work, and
alternatively we must consider other catabolic pathways for the amyloid
peptides (Vekrellis et al., 2000 ; Iwata et al., 2000 ; Glabe, 2000 )
while these and other as yet unknown degradation and clearance
mechanisms could become compromised in aging brain. Their precise
definition and their quantitative approximation in aging brain
constitutes the most interesting and challenging sequel to our current observations.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 31, 2000; accepted June 16, 2000.
This investigation was supported by the Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk
Onderzoek-Vlaanderen, by Nationaal Fonds voor Wetenschappeligh Onderzsek-Lotto, by the Interuniversity Attraction Pole program, by the Action Program for Biotechnology (Instituut voor Wetenschap en
Technologie/Vlaamse Actiecommissie voor Biotechnologie,
COT-008), by the 4th Framework European Economic
Commission-Biotechnology program, by the Rooms-fund, by Janssen
Research Foundation, and by Leuven Research and Development. The
intellectual and material contributions of the following scientists are
gratefully acknowledged: L. Serneels, K. Meurrens, B.Greenberg, K. Beyreuther, P. St George-Hyslop, E. Van Mechelen, A. Van de Voorde, W. Annaert, P. Seubert, and H. Van der Putten.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Fred Van Leuven, Experimental
Genetics Group, Center for Human Genetics, Flemish Institute for
Biotechnology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Campus Gasthuisberg O&N
06, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium. E-mail: fredvl{at}med.kuleuven.ac.be.
 |
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