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Age-related decrease in stimulated glutamate release and vesicular glutamate transporters in APP/PS1 transgenic and wild-type mice

Authors :
Gundars Goldsteins
Jari Koistinaho
Hennariikka Iivonen
Pradeep Banerjee
Jouni Ihalainen
Jeffrey C. Glennon
Heikki Tanila
Tarja Malm
Velta Keksa-Goldsteine
N. Leguit
Rimante Minkeviciene
O. Matilainen
Source :
Journal of Neurochemistry. 105:584-594
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Wiley, 2008.

Abstract

We assessed baseline and KCl-stimulated glutamate release by using microdialysis in freely moving young adult (7 months) and middle-aged (17 months) transgenic mice carrying mutated human amyloid precursor protein and presenilin genes (APdE9 mice) and their wild-type littermates. In addition, we assessed the age-related development of amyloid pathology and spatial memory impaired in the water maze and changes in glutamate transporters. APdE9 mice showed gradual spatial memory impairment between 6 and 15 months of age. The stimulated glutamate release declined very robustly in 17-month-old APdE9 mice as compared to 7-month-old APdE9 mice. This age-dependent decrease in stimulated glutamate release was also evident in wild-type mice, although it was not as robust as in APdE9 mice. When compared to individual baselines, all aged wild-type mice showed 25% or greater increase in glutamate release upon KCl stimulation, but none of the aged APdE9 mice. There was an age-dependent decline in VGLUT1 levels, but not in the levels of VGLUT2, GLT-1 or synaptophysin. Astrocyte activation as measured by glial acidic fibrillary protein was increased in middle-aged APdE9 mice. Blunted pre-synaptic glutamate response may contribute to memory deficit in middle-aged APdE9 mice.

Details

ISSN :
14714159 and 00223042
Volume :
105
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a1224be958dad789a522167a91a01bc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-4159.2007.05147.x