Assessment of neurovascular coupling and cortical spreading depression in mixed mouse models of atherosclerosis and Alzheimer’s disease

Author:

Shabir Osman123ORCID,Pendry Ben4,Lee Llywelyn35ORCID,Eyre Beth35,Sharp Paul S6,Rebollar Monica A34,Drew David1,Howarth Clare235ORCID,Heath Paul R4,Wharton Stephen B34,Francis Sheila E123,Berwick Jason235

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infection, Immunity and Cardiovascular Disease (IICD), University of Sheffield Medical School, Royal Hallamshire Hospital

2. Healthy Lifespan Institute (HELSI), University of Sheffield

3. Neuroscience Institute, University of Sheffield

4. Sheffield Institute for Translational Neuroscience (SITraN), University of Sheffield

5. Sheffield Neurovascular Lab, Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield

6. Medicines Discovery Catapult

Abstract

Neurovascular coupling is a critical brain mechanism whereby changes to blood flow accompany localised neural activity. The breakdown of neurovascular coupling is linked to the development and progression of several neurological conditions including dementia. In this study, we examined cortical haemodynamics in mouse preparations that modelled Alzheimer’s disease (J20-AD) and atherosclerosis (PCSK9-ATH) between 9 and 12 m of age. We report novel findings with atherosclerosis where neurovascular decline is characterised by significantly reduced blood volume, altered levels of oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin, in addition to global neuroinflammation. In the comorbid mixed model (J20-PCSK9-MIX), we report a 3 x increase in hippocampal amyloid-beta plaques. A key finding was that cortical spreading depression (CSD) due to electrode insertion into the brain was worse in the diseased animals and led to a prolonged period of hypoxia. These findings suggest that systemic atherosclerosis can be detrimental to neurovascular health and that having cardiovascular comorbidities can exacerbate pre-existing Alzheimer’s-related amyloid-plaques.

Funder

University of Sheffield

British Heart Foundation

Wellcome Trust

Royal Society

Alzheimer’s Research UK

Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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