Cognitive heterogeneity reveals molecular signatures of age-related impairment

Author:

Logan Sreemathi12ORCID,Baier Matthew P2ORCID,Owen Daniel B2,Peasari John12,Jones Kenneth L3,Ranjit Rojina2,Yarbrough Hannah P2,Masingale Anthony M2,Bhandari Suyesha2,Rice Heather C12,Kinter Michael T4,Sonntag William E12

Affiliation:

1. Center for Geroscience and Healthy Brain Aging, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center , Oklahoma City, OK 73104 , USA

2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center , Oklahoma City, OK 73104 , USA

3. Department of Cell Biology, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center , Oklahoma City, OK 73104 , USA

4. Aging and Metabolism Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation , Oklahoma City, OK 73104 , USA

Abstract

AbstractThe greatest risk factor for cognitive decline is aging. The biological mechanisms for this decline remain enigmatic due, in part, to the confounding of normal aging mechanisms and those that contribute to cognitive impairment. Importantly, many individuals exhibit impaired cognition in age, while some retain functionality despite their age. Here, we establish a behavioral testing paradigm to characterize age-related cognitive heterogeneity in inbred aged C57BL/6 mice and reliably separate animals into cognitively “intact” (resilient) and “impaired” subgroups using a high-resolution home-cage testing paradigm for spatial discrimination. RNA sequencing and subsequent pathway analyses of cognitively stratified mice revealed molecular signatures unique to cognitively impaired animals, including transcriptional down-regulation of genes involved in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and sirtuin (Sirt1 and Sirt3) expression in the hippocampus. Mitochondrial function assessed using high-resolution respirometry indicated a reduced OXPHOS coupling efficiency in cognitively impaired animals with subsequent hippocampal analyses revealing an increase in the oxidative damage marker (3-nitrotyrosine) and an up-regulation of antioxidant enzymes (Sod2, Sod1, Prdx6, etc.). Aged–impaired animals also showed increased levels of IL-6 and TNF-α gene expression in the hippocampus and increased serum levels of proinflammatory cytokines, including IL-6. These results provide critical insight into the diversity of brain aging in inbred animals and reveal the unique mechanisms that separate cognitive resilience from cognitive impairment. Our data indicate the importance of cognitive stratification of aging animals to delineate the mechanisms underlying cognitive impairment and test the efficacy of therapeutic interventions.

Funder

NIH

Presbyterian Health Foundation Bridge

Molecular Analysis Cellular Imaging

Animal Model Development and Behavioral Assessment (AMD-BA) Cores

Cellular and Molecular GeroScience CoBRE

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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