Neurobiology of Disease (Feb 2009)

Passive immunotherapy rapidly increases structural plasticity in a mouse model of Alzheimer disease

  • Tara L. Spires-Jones,
  • Matthew L. Mielke,
  • Anete Rozkalne,
  • Melanie Meyer-Luehmann,
  • Alix de Calignon,
  • Brian J. Bacskai,
  • Dale Schenk,
  • Bradley T. Hyman

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 2
pp. 213 – 220

Abstract

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Senile plaque-associated changes in neuronal connectivity such as altered neurite trajectory, dystrophic swellings, and synapse and dendritic spine loss are thought to contribute to cognitive dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease and mouse models. Immunotherapy to remove amyloid beta is a promising therapy that causes recovery of neurite trajectory and dystrophic neurites over a period of days. The acute effects of immunotherapy on neurite morphology at a time point when soluble amyloid has been cleared but dense plaques are not yet affected are unknown. To examine whether removal of soluble amyloid β (Aβ) has a therapeutic effect on dendritic spines, we explored spine dynamics within 1 h of applying a neutralizing anti Aβ antibody. This acute treatment caused a small but significant increase in dendritic spine formation in PDAPP brain far from plaques, without affecting spine plasticity near plaques or average dendritic spine density. These data support the hypothesis that removing toxic soluble forms of amyloid-beta rapidly increases structural plasticity possibly allowing functional recovery of neural circuits.

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