Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4314007 Behavioural Brain Research 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Converging lines of evidence associate gluco-regulatory abnormalities and peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) gamma function with increased risk for Alzheimer's disease (AD). In this study, we used the Tg2576 AD mouse model to test the hypothesis that cognitive improvement following 1 month of PPAR gamma agonism with rosiglitazone (RTZ) correlates with peripheral gluco-regulatory status. We assessed cognition and peripheral gluco-regulatory status of Tg2576 mice following 1 month treatment with RTZ initiated prior to, coincident with, or after, the onset of peripheral gluco-regulatory abnormalities (4, 8, and 12 months of age, respectively). Whereas 5 months old (MO) and 13 MO Tg2576 did not gain cognitive improvement after 1 month treatment with RTZ, 9 MO Tg2576 mice exhibited reversal of associative learning and memory deficits. Peripheral gluco-regulatory abnormalities were improved in 9 and 13 MO Tg2576 with RTZ treatment; RTZ treatment had no effect on the normal glucose status of 5 MO Tg2576 mice. These findings suggest that RTZ-mediated cognitive improvement does not correlate with peripheral gluco-regulatory abnormalities per se, but reflects the age-dependent mechanistic differences that underlie cognitive decline in this mouse model.

Research highlights▶ 1 month PPARγ agonism reverses cognitive deficits in 9 MO Tg2576 AD mice. ▶ 1 month PPARγ agonism does not reverse cognitive deficits in 5 or 13 MO Tg2576. ▶ Age dependence of PPARγ cognitive rescue likely due to age-related disease mechanisms. ▶ Rescue of cognitive decline in Tg2576 may require disease-stage-tailored interventions.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , ,