IBRO Neuroscience Reports (Jun 2022)

Lysosomal gene Hexb displays haploinsufficiency in a knock-in mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease

  • Lauren S. Whyte,
  • Célia Fourrier,
  • Sofia Hassiotis,
  • Adeline A. Lau,
  • Paul J. Trim,
  • Leanne K. Hein,
  • Kathryn J. Hattersley,
  • Julien Bensalem,
  • John J. Hopwood,
  • Kim M. Hemsley,
  • Timothy J. Sargeant

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 131 – 141

Abstract

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Lysosomal network abnormalities are an increasingly recognised feature of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which appear early and are progressive in nature. Sandhoff disease and Tay-Sachs disease (neurological lysosomal storage diseases caused by mutations in genes that code for critical subunits of β-hexosaminidase) result in accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) and related proteolytic fragments in the brain. However, experiments that determine whether mutations in genes that code for β-hexosaminidase are risk factors for AD are currently lacking. To determine the relationship between β-hexosaminidase and AD, we investigated whether a heterozygous deletion of Hexb, the gene that encodes the beta subunit of β-hexosaminidase, modifies the behavioural phenotype and appearance of disease lesions in AppNL-G-F/NL-G-F (AppKI/KI) mice. AppKI/KI and Hexb+/- mice were crossed and evaluated in a behavioural test battery. Neuropathological hallmarks of AD and ganglioside levels in the brain were also examined. Heterozygosity of Hexb in AppKI/KI mice reduced learning flexibility during the Reversal Phase of the Morris water maze. Contrary to expectation, heterozygosity of Hexb caused a small but significant decrease in amyloid beta deposition and an increase in the microglial marker IBA1 that was region- and age-specific. Hexb heterozygosity caused detectable changes in the brain and in the behaviour of an AD model mouse, consistent with previous reports that described a biochemical relationship between HEXB and AD. This study reveals that the lysosomal enzyme gene Hexb is not haplosufficient in the mouse AD brain.

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