Alzheimer’s Disease models

A review of the tools for creating animal models of Alzheimer’s Disease

“192 IgG-saporin binds selectively and irreversibly to low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor interrupting cholinergic neuronal protein synthesis.”

“Anti-DBH-SAP allows a selective and gradual lesioning of noradrenergic neurones in the brain stem nucleus locus coeruleus, the primary site of noradrenaline production in the CNS.”

Verkhratsky A, Parpura V, Rodriguez-Arellano J, & Zorec R. (2019). Astroglia in Alzheimer’s Disease. In A Verkhratsky, M Ho, R Zorec & V Parpura (Eds.), Neuroglia in Neurodegenerative Diseases (Vol. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, vol 1175, pp. 273-324). Singapore: Springer.   

For more information:      IT-01:  192-IgG-SAP and IT-03:  Anti-DBH-SAP

Summary:  192-IgG-SAP binds selectively and irreversibly to low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor interrupting cholinergic neuronal protein synthesis was employed.  Anti-DBH-SAP binds dopamine-β-hydroxylase, which is not only localized mainly in the cytosol, but also at the plasma membrane surface of noradrenergic neurons.  Anti-DBH-SAP produced specific and dose-dependent depletions of locus coeruleus neurons, with no effects on other cholinergic, dopaminergic or serotonergic neuronal populations.  The possibility to induce a partial or total noradrenergic loss (by varying the injected dose) makes this immunotoxic approach an ideal model to study events within the noradrenergic projection system, as they occur during age-related demise of locus coeruleus in humans.

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