Alzheimer's-linked axonal changes accompany elevated antidromic action potential failure rate in aged mice.

老年小鼠中,与阿尔茨海默病相关的轴突变化伴随着逆向动作电位失败率的升高

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作者:Russo Matthew L, Ayala Gelique, Neal Demetria, Rogalsky Annalise E, Ahmad Suzan, Musial Timothy F, Pearlman Morgan, Bean Linda A, Farooqi Anise K, Ahmed Aysha, Castaneda Adrian, Patel Aneri, Parduhn Zachary, Haddad Loreece G, Gabriel Ashley, Disterhoft John F, Nicholson Daniel A
Alzheimer's disease (AD) affects both grey and white matter (WM), but considerably more is known about the former. Interestingly, WM disruption has been consistently observed and thoroughly described using imaging modalities, particularly MRI which has shown WM functional disconnections between the hippocampus and other brain regions during AD pathogenesis when early neurodegeneration and synapse loss are also evident. Nonetheless, high-resolution structural and functional analyses of WM during AD pathogenesis remain scarce. Given the importance of the myelinated axons in the WM for conveying information across brain regions, such studies will provide valuable information on the cellular drivers and consequences of WM disruption that contribute to the characteristic cognitive decline of AD. Here, we employed a multi-scale approach to investigate hippocampal WM disruption during AD pathogenesis and determine whether hippocampal WM changes accompany the well-documented grey matter losses. Our data indicate that ultrastructural myelin disruption is elevated in the alveus in human AD cases and increases with age in 5xFAD mice. Unreliable action potential propagation and changes to sodium channel expression at the node of Ranvier co-emerged with this deterioration. These findings provide important insight to the neurobiological substrates and functional consequences of decreased WM integrity and are consistent with the notion that hippocampal disconnection contributes to cognitive changes in AD.

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