Trimethylamine N-Oxide Reduces Neurite Density and Plaque Intensity in a Murine Model of Alzheimer's Disease

三甲胺 N-氧化物降低阿尔茨海默病小鼠模型中的神经突密度和斑块强度

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作者:Katie R Zarbock, Jessica H Han, Ajay P Singh, Sydney P Thomas, Barbara B Bendlin, John M Denu, John-Paul J Yu, Federico E Rey, Tyler K Ulland

Background

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common aging-associated neurodegenerative disease; nevertheless, the etiology and progression of the disease is still incompletely understood. We have previously shown that the microbially-derived metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) is elevated in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of individuals with cognitive impairment due to AD and positively correlates with increases in CSF biomarkers for tangle, plaque, and neuronal pathology.

Conclusion

These data suggest that elevated plasma TMAO impacts AD pathology via reductions in neurite density.

Methods

To do so, transgenic 5XFAD mice were supplemented with TMAO for 12 weeks. Neurite density was assessed through quantitative brain microstructure imaging with neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Label-free, quantitative proteomics was performed on cortex lysates from TMAO-treated and untreated animals. Amyloid-β plaques, astrocytes, and microglia were assessed by fluorescent immunohistochemistry and synaptic protein expression was quantified via western blot.

Objective

We assessed the direct impact of TMAO on AD progression.

Results

Oral TMAO administration resulted in significantly reduced neurite density in several regions of the brain. Amyloid-β plaque mean intensity was reduced, while plaque count and size remained unaltered. Proteomics analysis revealed that TMAO treatment impacted the expression of 30 proteins (1.5-fold cut-off) in 5XFAD mice, including proteins known to influence neuronal health and amyloid-β precursor protein processing. TMAO treatment did not alter astrocyte and microglial response nor cortical synaptic protein expression.

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