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Cyclooxygenase inhibition targets neurons to prevent early behavioural decline in Alzheimer’s disease model mice
Author(s) -
Nathaniel S. Woodling,
Damien Colas,
Qian Wang,
Paras S. Minhas,
Maharshi Panchal,
Xibin Liang,
Siddhita D. Mhatre,
Holden D. Brown,
Novie Ko,
Irène Zagol-Ikapitte,
Marieke van der Hart,
Taline V. Khroyan,
Bayarsaikhan Chuluun,
Prachi Priyam,
Ginger L. Milne,
Arash Rassoulpour,
Olivier Boutaud,
Amy Manning-Bog,
H. Craig Heller,
Katrin I. Andreasson
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/aww117
Subject(s) - neuroscience , cyclooxygenase , dopamine , cognitive decline , hippocampal formation , hippocampus , kynurenine pathway , pharmacology , memory impairment , medicine , biology , disease , kynurenine , cognition , dementia , enzyme , biochemistry , tryptophan , amino acid
Identifying preventive targets for Alzheimer's disease is a central challenge of modern medicine. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which inhibit the cyclooxygenase enzymes COX-1 and COX-2, reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease in normal ageing populations. This preventive effect coincides with an extended preclinical phase that spans years to decades before onset of cognitive decline. In the brain, COX-2 is induced in neurons in response to excitatory synaptic activity and in glial cells in response to inflammation. To identify mechanisms underlying prevention of cognitive decline by anti-inflammatory drugs, we first identified an early object memory deficit in APPSwe-PS1ΔE9 mice that preceded previously identified spatial memory deficits in this model. We modelled prevention of this memory deficit with ibuprofen, and found that ibuprofen prevented memory impairment without producing any measurable changes in amyloid-β accumulation or glial inflammation. Instead, ibuprofen modulated hippocampal gene expression in pathways involved in neuronal plasticity and increased levels of norepinephrine and dopamine. The gene most highly downregulated by ibuprofen was neuronal tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenase (Tdo2), which encodes an enzyme that metabolizes tryptophan to kynurenine. TDO2 expression was increased by neuronal COX-2 activity, and overexpression of hippocampal TDO2 produced behavioural deficits. Moreover, pharmacological TDO2 inhibition prevented behavioural deficits in APPSwe-PS1ΔE9 mice. Taken together, these data demonstrate broad effects of cyclooxygenase inhibition on multiple neuronal pathways that counteract the neurotoxic effects of early accumulating amyloid-β oligomers.

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