TgF344-AD rat model of Alzheimer’s disease: spatial disorientation and asymmetry in hemispheric neurodegeneration

Author:

Sagalajev BorissORCID,Lennartz Lina,Vieth Lukas,Gunawan Cecilia Tasya,Neumaier Bernd,Drzezga Alexander,Visser-Vandewalle Veerle,Endepols Heike,Sesia Thibaut

Abstract

AbstractBACKGROUNDThe TgF344-AD ratline represents a transgenic animal model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We previously reported spatial memory impairment in TgF344-AD rats, yet the underlying mechanism remained unknown. We, therefore, set out to determine if spatial memory impairment in TgF344-AD rats is attributed to spatial disorientation. Also, we aimed to investigate whether TgF344-AD rats exhibit signs of asymmetry in hemispheric neurodegeneration, similar to what is reported in spatially disoriented AD patients. Finally, we sought to examine how spatial disorientation correlates with working memory performance.METHODSTgF344-AD rats were divided into two groups balanced by sex and genotype. The first group underwent the delayed match-to-sample (DMS) task for the assessment of spatial orientation and working memory, while the second group underwent positron emission tomography (PET) for the assessment of glucose metabolism and microglial activity as in-vivo markers of neurodegeneration. Rats were 13 months old during DMS training and 14-16 months old during DMS testing and PET.RESULTSIn the DMS task, TgF344-AD rats were more likely than their wild-type littermates to display strong preference for one of the two levers, preventing working memory testing. Rats without lever-preference showed similar working memory, regardless of their genotype. PET revealed hemispherically asymmetric clusters of increased microglial activity and altered glucose metabolism in TgF344-AD rats.CONCLUSIONSTgF344-AD rats display spatial disorientation and hemispherically asymmetrical neurodegeneration, suggesting a potential causal relationship consistent with clinical observations. In rats without spatial disorientation, working memory remains intact.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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