An App knock-in rat model for Alzheimer’s disease exhibiting Aβ and tau pathologies, neuronal death and cognitive impairments

Keliang Pang(Capital Medical University), Richeng Jiang(Jilin University), Wei Zhang(Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences), Zhengyi Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Linlin Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Makoto Shimozawa(Karolinska Institutet), Simone Tambaro(Karolinska Institutet), Johanna Mayer(Karolinska Institutet), Baogui Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Man Li(Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jiesi Wang(Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences), Hang Liu(Capital Medical University), Ailing Yang(Peking University), Xi Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jiazheng Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bengt Winblad(Karolinska University Hospital), Hua Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tianzi Jiang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Weiwen Wang(Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences), Per Nilsson(Karolinska Institutet), Wei Guo(Capital Medical University), Bai Lu(Capital Medical University)
Cell Research
November 17, 2021
Cited by 136Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

A major obstacle in Alzheimer's disease (AD) research is the lack of predictive and translatable animal models that reflect disease progression and drug efficacy. Transgenic mice overexpressing amyloid precursor protein (App) gene manifest non-physiological and ectopic expression of APP and its fragments in the brain, which is not observed in AD patients. The App knock-in mice circumvented some of these problems, but they do not exhibit tau pathology and neuronal death. We have generated a rat model, with three familiar App mutations and humanized Aβ sequence knocked into the rat App gene. Without altering the levels of full-length APP and other APP fragments, this model exhibits pathologies and disease progression resembling those in human patients: deposit of Aβ plaques in relevant brain regions, microglia activation and gliosis, progressive synaptic degeneration and AD-relevant cognitive deficits. Interestingly, we have observed tau pathology, neuronal apoptosis and necroptosis and brain atrophy, phenotypes rarely seen in other APP models. This App knock-in rat model may serve as a useful tool for AD research, identifying new drug targets and biomarkers, and testing therapeutics.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis