Levetiracetam suppresses neuronal network dysfunction and reverses synaptic and cognitive deficits in an Alzheimer’s disease model

Pascal E. Sanchez(Gladstone Institutes), Lei Zhu(Gladstone Institutes), Laure Verret(Gladstone Institutes), Keith Vossel(Gladstone Institutes), Anna G. Orr(Gladstone Institutes), John R. Cirrito(Washington University in St. Louis), Nino Devidze(Gladstone Institutes), Kaitlyn Ho(Gladstone Institutes), Gui-Qiu Yu(Gladstone Institutes), Jorge J. Palop(Gladstone Institutes), Lennart Mucke(Gladstone Institutes)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 6, 2012
Cited by 644Open Access
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Abstract

In light of the rising prevalence of Alzheimer's disease (AD), new strategies to prevent, halt, and reverse this condition are needed urgently. Perturbations of brain network activity are observed in AD patients and in conditions that increase the risk of developing AD, suggesting that aberrant network activity might contribute to AD-related cognitive decline. Human amyloid precursor protein (hAPP) transgenic mice simulate key aspects of AD, including pathologically elevated levels of amyloid-β peptides in brain, aberrant neural network activity, remodeling of hippocampal circuits, synaptic deficits, and behavioral abnormalities. Whether these alterations are linked in a causal chain remains unknown. To explore whether hAPP/amyloid-β-induced aberrant network activity contributes to synaptic and cognitive deficits, we treated hAPP mice with different antiepileptic drugs. Among the drugs tested, only levetiracetam (LEV) effectively reduced abnormal spike activity detected by electroencephalography. Chronic treatment with LEV also reversed hippocampal remodeling, behavioral abnormalities, synaptic dysfunction, and deficits in learning and memory in hAPP mice. Our findings support the hypothesis that aberrant network activity contributes causally to synaptic and cognitive deficits in hAPP mice. LEV might also help ameliorate related abnormalities in people who have or are at risk for AD.


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