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Alzheimerβs Plaques Disrupt Brain Networks
According to study from Washington University.

Scientists studying the way Alzheimerβs takes root in the brain have identified important new similarities between a mouse model and human Alzheimerβs.
Researchers at Β School of Medicine in St. Louis have shown that brain plaques in mice are associated with disruption of the ability of brain regions to network with each other. This decline parallels earlier results from human studies, suggesting that what scientists learn about Alzheimerβs effects on brain networks in the mice will likely be transferable to human disease research.
The study, published in theΒ Journal of Neuroscience, is among the first to precisely quantify the effects of Alzheimerβs disease plaques on brain networks in an animal model. Until now, scientists studying Alzheimerβs in animals have generally been limited to assessments of structural brain damage and analyses of brain cell activity levels.Β
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βPrecise measurement of changes in brain networks are critical to understanding Alzheimerβs and will likely be important in models of other neurodegenerative disorders,β said senior author David M. Holtzman, MD, the Andrew B. and Gretchen P. Jones Professor and head of the Department of Neurology. βFor example, we can now test whether blocking Alzheimerβs plaques from building up in the mouse brain prevents disruptions in brain networks.β
In humans, scientists assess the integrity of brain networks by monitoring cerebral blood flow with functional magnetic resonance imaging scans. When the brain is idle, blood flow rises and falls in sync in brain regions that network with each other, a phenomenon called functional connectivity. These links are believed to be an important component of normal brain activity. In humans, problems in functional connectivity appear to presage the development of dementia.Β
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Applying the same technique to mice can be very challenging, Holtzman said. Instead, researchers used an approach for monitoring brain blood flow in mice recently developed by the laboratory of Joseph Culver, PhD, associate professor of radiology at Washington University. The technique involves mounting a ring with light-emitting diodes on the head of a lightly anesthetized mouse. Sensors in the ring monitor light that is reflected back from hemoglobin molecules flowing through blood vessels in the brain. This data can be used to quickly assess blood flow.
Researchers applied the approach to a mouse model of Alzheimerβs disease. They found that the brain regions with the strongest network connections in young mice developed the most plaques as the mice aged. As plaques accumulated in these regions, functional connectivity declined. Scientists have already found similar results in humans using functional magnetic resonance imaging.
A link between stronger brain networking in young mice and increased signs of Alzheimerβs in older mice may seem contradictory, but it echoes earlier studies in Holtzmanβs laboratory that linked higher activity levels in individual brain cells to increased plaque deposition.Β
Holtzman and others have speculated that the types of information and functions encoded in the activities of brain cells and their networks may affect their impact on Alzheimerβs risk. Epidemiological studies have shown that brain stimulation, such as puzzles, reading or learning, is associated with reduced risk of Alzheimerβs. Leaving the brain idle for long periods of time may increase risk.Β
The mice studied in the research have a mutated form of a human protein, Alzheimerβs precursor protein, that causes them to develop brain plaques. Other mouse models have mutated versions of a protein called tau that lead to the development of neurofibrillary tangles, which are another hallmark of Alzheimerβs disease.
Holtzman, Culver and colleagues plan to test functional connectivity in mouse models with mutated versions of human tau. The results may help determine the effects of additional types of protein aggregates in the brain, according to Holtzman.
βImportant new insights into the normal and dysfunctional human brain have been made via studies of functional connectivity,β Holtzman said. βBeing able to analyze brain function from a similar perspective in animal models, where we have much more freedom to manipulate genes and proteins, should be very helpful in our efforts to understand and treat complex conditions like Alzheimerβs disease.β
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