Val97Leu mutant presenilin-1 induces tau hyperphosphorylation and spatial memory deficit in mice and the underlying mechanisms

Yue Wang, Zhe Cheng, Wei Qin, Jianping Jia, Yue Wang, Zhe Cheng, Wei Qin, Jianping Jia

Abstract

Although the pathological role of presenilin-1 mutation in early onset familial Alzheimer's disease has been widely studied, few focused on how the presenilin-1 mutations result in memory impairment and tau hyperphosphorylation. In the present study, we expressed human Val97Leu mutant presenilin-1, which is reported in Chinese pedigrees by our group, in transgenic mice and found that the mutant presenilin-1 induced spatial memory deficit and tau hyperphosphorylation at PHF-1, pS199/202, pT231 and pS396 epitopes, but not at pS214 and pS422 epitopes. Pearson analysis showed that the memory deficit was only significantly correlated with tau phosphorylation level at PHF-1, pS199/202, pT231 and pS396 epitopes. Additionally, the hyperphosphorylated tau and tangle-like argentophilic structures were detected at CA3 and CA4, but not CA1, region of hippocampus, and we also found tangle-like structure and wizened degenerative neurons in frontal cortex. We demonstrated the tau hyperphosphorylation at the same epitopes in N2a cells expressing the mutant presenilin-1, which is caused by inhibition of phosphoinositol-3 kinase/Akt and activation of glycogen synthase kinase-3 specifically. Our data demonstrated that human Val97Leu mutant presenilin-1 causes spatial memory deficit in mice and increases tau phosphorylation level in glycogen synthase kinase-3-dependent manner.

© 2011 The Authors. Journal of Neurochemistry © 2011 International Society for Neurochemistry.

Source: PubMed

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