International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2023)

Downregulation of Sirtuin 1 Does Not Account for the Impaired Long-Term Potentiation in the Prefrontal Cortex of Female APPswe/PS1dE9 Mice Modelling Alzheimer’s Disease

  • Cátia R. Lopes,
  • Joana S. Silva,
  • Joana Santos,
  • Matilde S. Rodrigues,
  • Daniela Madeira,
  • Andreia Oliveira,
  • Ana Moreira-de-Sá,
  • Vanessa S. Lourenço,
  • Francisco Q. Gonçalves,
  • Henrique B. Silva,
  • Ana Patrícia Simões,
  • Anabela P. Rolo,
  • Paula M. Canas,
  • Ângelo R. Tomé,
  • Carlos M. Palmeira,
  • João Pedro Lopes,
  • Rodrigo A. Cunha,
  • Paula Agostinho,
  • Samira G. Ferreira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24086968
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 8
p. 6968

Abstract

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Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which predominantly affects women, involves at its onset a metabolic deregulation associated with a synaptic failure. Here, we performed a behavioral, neurophysiological and neurochemical characterization of 9-month-old female APPswe/PS1dE9 (APP/PS1) mice as a model of early AD. These animals showed learning and memory deficits in the Morris water maze, increased thigmotaxis and anxiety-like behavior and showed signs of fear generalization. Long-term potentiation (LTP) was decreased in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), but not in the CA1 hippocampus or amygdala. This was associated with a decreased density of sirtuin-1 in cerebrocortical synaptosomes and a decreased density of sirtuin-1 and sestrin-2 in total cerebrocortical extracts, without alterations of sirtuin-3 levels or of synaptic markers (syntaxin, synaptophysin, SNAP25, PSD95). However, activation of sirtuin-1 did not affect or recover PFC-LTP deficit in APP/PS1 female mice; instead, inhibition of sirtuin-1 increased PFC-LTP magnitude. It is concluded that mood and memory dysfunction in 9-month-old female APP/PS1 mice is associated with a parallel decrease in synaptic plasticity and in synaptic sirtuin-1 levels in the prefrontal cortex, although sirtiun1 activation failed to restore abnormal cortical plasticity.

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