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Analysis of Age-Dependent Alterations in Excitability Properties of CA1 Pyramidal Neurons in an APPPS1 Model of Alzheimer’s Disease

Authors: Paola Vitale 1, Ana Rita Salgueiro-Pereira 2, Carmen Alina Lupascu 1, Michael Willem 3, Rosanna Migliore 1, Michele Migliore 1 Hélène Marie 2,

Author information: 1 Institute of Biophysics, National Research Council, Palermo, Italy, 2 Institute of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, CNRS, UMR7275, Université Côte d’Azur, Valbonne, France, 3 Biomedical Center, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany

Corresponding authors: Michele Migliore ( michele.migliore@cnr.it ); Hélène Marie ( marie@ipmc.cnrs.fr );

Journal: Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience

Download Url: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnagi.2021.668948/abstract

Citation: Vitale P, Salgueiro-Pereira AR, Lupascu CA, Willem M, Migliore R, Migliore M and Marie H (2021) Analysis of Age-Dependent Alterations in Excitability Properties of CA1 Pyramidal Neurons in an APPPS1 Model of Alzheimer’s Disease. Front. Aging Neurosci. 13:668948.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2021.668948

Licence: the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license  applies for all files. Under this Open Access license anyone  may copy, distribute, or reuse the files as long as the authors and the original source are properly cited.

Abstract:
Age-dependent accumulation of amyloid-beta provoking increasing brain amyloidopathy, triggers abnormal patterns of neuron activity and circuit synchronization in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) as observed in human AD patients and AD mouse models. Recent studies on AD mouse models, mimicking this age-dependent amyloidopathy, identified alterations in CA1 neuron excitability. However, these models generally also overexpress mutated amyloid precursor protein (APP) and presenilin 1 (PS1) and there is a lack of a clear correlation of neuronal excitability alterations with progressive amyloidopathy. The active development of computational models of AD points out the need of collecting such experimental data to build a reliable disease model exhibiting AD-like disease progression. We therefore used the feature extraction tool of the Human Brain Project (HBP) Brain Simulation Platform to systematically analyze the excitability profile of CA1 pyramidal neuron in the APPPS1 mouse model. We identified specific features of neuron excitability that best correlate either with over-expression of mutated APP and PS1 or increasing ABeta-amyloidopathy. Notably, we report strong alterations in membrane time constant and action potential width and weak alterations in firing behavior. Also, using a CA1 pyramidal neuron model, we evidence amyloidopathy-dependent alterations in Ih. Finally, cluster analysis of these recordings showed that we could reliably assign a trace to its correct group, opening the door to a more refined, less variable analysis of AD-affected neurons. This inter-disciplinary analysis, bringing together experimentalists and modelers, helps to further unravel the neuronal mechanisms most affected by AD and to build a biologically-plausible computational model of the AD brain.

Resources

Data and models: data and models used in the paper are available at the links reported below.