Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, 3655 Promenade Sir William Osler, Montreal, QC, Canada H3G 1Y6
Abstract
Reduced estrogens, either through aging or postsurgery breast cancer treatment with the oral nonsteroidal aromatase inhibitor letrozole, are linked with declined cognitive abilities. However, a direct link between letrozole and neuronal deficits induced by pathogenic insults associated with aging such as beta amyloid (Aβ1–42) has not been established. The objective of this study was to determine if letrozole aggravates synaptic deficits concurrent withAβ1–42insult. We examined the effects of letrozole and oligomericAβ1–42treatment in dissociated and organotypic hippocampal slice cultures. Changes in glial cell morphology, neuronal mitochondria, and synaptic structures upon letrozole treatment were monitored by confocal microscopy, as they were shown to be affected byAβ1–42oligomers. OligomericAβ1–42or letrozole alone caused decreases in mitochondrial volume, dendritic spine density, synaptophysin (synaptic marker), and the postsynaptic protein, synaptopodin. Here, we demonstrated that mitochondrial and synaptic structural deficits were exacerbated when letrozole therapy was combined withAβ1–42treatment. Our novel findings suggest that letrozole may increase neuronal susceptibility to pathological insults, such as oligomericAβ1–42in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). These changes in dendritic spine number, synaptic protein expression, and mitochondrial morphology may, in part, explain the increased prevalence of cognitive decline associated with aromatase inhibitor use.
Funder
Canadian Institute of Health Research and the Alzheimer’s Society of Canada
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology
Cited by
29 articles.
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