Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA.
J Neurosci. 2010 Nov 3;30(44):14915-24. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3917-10.2010.
Familial dementias, which include Alzheimer disease (AD), familial British dementia (FBD), and familial Danish dementia (FDD), are caused by dominantly inherited autosomal mutations and are characterized by the production of amyloidogenic peptides, neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and neurodegeneration (St George-Hyslop and Petit, 2005; Garringer et al., 2009). The prevailing pathogenic theory, the "amyloid cascade hypothesis" (Hardy and Selkoe, 2002), posits that the accumulation of amyloidogenic peptides triggers tauopathy, neurodegeneration, and cognitive and behavioral changes. However, this hypothesis is yet to be validated, and causes of dementia may be multifaceted and involve other mechanisms, such as loss of function due to pathogenic mutations. Mouse models of human dementia invariably use transgenic expression systems (LaFerla and Oddo, 2005; McGowan et al., 2006; Vidal et al., 2009; Coomaraswamy et al., 2010) that do not reflect the genotypes of human disease and cannot replicate loss of function. Therefore, we generated a knock-in (KI) mouse model of FBD (FBD(KI)) genetically congruous with the human disease. FBD is caused by a missense mutation at the stop codon of the BRI2 gene (Vidal et al., 1999) and, like FBD patients, FBD(KI) mice carry this mutation in one of the two murine Bri2 alleles. We report that the British mutation drastically reduces expression of mature BRI2 in both KI mice and human FBD brains. This deficit is associated with severe hippocampal memory deficits in FBD(KI) mice. Remarkably, these animals showed no cerebral amyloidosis and tauopathy. Bri2(+/-) mice present memory deficits similar to those in FBD(KI) animals. Collectively, these results indicate that the British BRI2 mutation underlies abnormal memory due to loss of BRI2 function and independently of histopathological alterations typically evident in advanced neurodegenerative disease.
家族性痴呆症,包括阿尔茨海默病(AD)、家族性英国痴呆症(FBD)和家族性丹麦痴呆症(FDD),是由显性遗传的常染色体突变引起的,其特征是产生淀粉样肽、神经原纤维缠结(NFTs)和神经退行性变(St George-Hyslop 和 Petit,2005;Garringer 等人,2009)。目前占主导地位的致病理论,即“淀粉样蛋白级联假说”(Hardy 和 Selkoe,2002),假设淀粉样肽的积累引发 tau 病、神经退行性变以及认知和行为改变。然而,该假说尚未得到验证,痴呆症的病因可能是多方面的,涉及其他机制,例如由于致病突变导致的功能丧失。人类痴呆症的小鼠模型通常使用转基因表达系统(LaFerla 和 Oddo,2005;McGowan 等人,2006;Vidal 等人,2009;Coomaraswamy 等人,2010),这些系统不能反映人类疾病的基因型,也不能复制功能丧失。因此,我们构建了一种与人类疾病基因一致的 FBD(FBD(KI))的基因敲入(KI)小鼠模型。FBD 是由 BRI2 基因的终止密码子处的错义突变引起的(Vidal 等人,1999),与 FBD 患者一样,FBD(KI)小鼠在两个 Bri2 等位基因之一中携带该突变。我们报告称,英国突变大大降低了 KI 小鼠和人类 FBD 大脑中成熟 Bri2 的表达。这种缺陷与 FBD(KI)小鼠严重的海马记忆缺陷有关。值得注意的是,这些动物没有脑淀粉样变性和 tau 病。Bri2(+/-)小鼠表现出与 FBD(KI)动物相似的记忆缺陷。总之,这些结果表明,英国 BRI2 突变导致异常记忆是由于 Bri2 功能丧失,并且独立于通常在晚期神经退行性疾病中明显的组织病理学改变。