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Background: Individuals with Down syndrome (DS) have intellectual disability and develop Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology during midlife, particularly in the hippocampal component of the medial temporal lobe memory circuit. However, molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying selective vulnerability of hippocampal CA1 neurons remains a major knowledge gap during DS/AD onset. This is compounded by evidence showing spatial (e.g., deep versus superficial) localization of pyramidal neurons (PNs) has profound effects on activity and innervation within the CA1 region.
Objective: We investigated whether there is a spatial profiling difference in CA1 PNs in an aged female DS/AD mouse model. We posit dysfunction may be dependent on spatial localization and innervation patterns within discrete CA1 subfields.
Methods: Laser capture microdissection was performed on trisomic CA1 PNs in an established mouse model of DS/AD compared to disomic controls, isolating the entire CA1 pyramidal neuron layer and sublayer microisolations of deep and superficial PNs from the distal CA1 (CA1a) region.
Results: RNA sequencing and bioinformatic inquiry revealed dysregulation of CA1 PNs based on spatial location and innervation patterns. The entire CA1 region displayed the most differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in trisomic mice reflecting innate DS vulnerability, while trisomic CA1a deep PNs exhibited fewer but more physiologically relevant DEGs, as evidenced by bioinformatic inquiry.
Conclusions: CA1a deep neurons displayed numerous DEGs linked to cognitive functions whereas CA1a superficial neurons, with approximately equal numbers of DEGs, were not linked to pathways of dysregulation, suggesting the spatial location of vulnerable CA1 PNs plays an important role in circuit dissolution.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-240622 | DOI Listing |
Hippocampus
September 2025
Center for Cognitive Neurology, Department of Neurology, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Synaptic spine loss is an early pathophysiologic hallmark of Alzheimer disease (AD) that precedes overt loss of dendritic architecture and frank neurodegeneration. While spine loss signifies a decreased engagement of postsynaptic neurons by presynaptic targets, the degree to which loss of spines and their passive components impacts the excitability of postsynaptic neurons and responses to surviving synaptic inputs is unclear. Using passive multicompartmental models of CA1 pyramidal neurons (PNs), implicated in early AD, we find that spine loss alone drives a boosting of remaining inputs to their proximal and distal dendrites, targeted by CA3 and entorhinal cortex (EC), respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Chem Biol
August 2025
Department of Neurology, The First Affiliated Hospital of USTC, Center for Advanced Interdisciplinary Science and Biomedicine of IHM, State Key Laboratory of Eye Health, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China.
Hippocampal plasticity has an undisputed role in learning and memory. Despite decades of research focusing on the neurobiological basis of synaptic plasticity, relatively little is known about the metabolic dynamics leading to hippocampal plasticity at the single-cell level. Here we used single-cell mass spectrometry to dissect metabolomic changes of excitatory pyramidal neurons (PNs), inhibitory interneurons and astrocytes in hippocampus during long-term potentiation (LTP) and learning-related behaviors in mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep
August 2025
Institute of Science and Technology (ISTA), 3400 Klosterneuburg, Austria. Electronic address:
The hippocampus, critical for learning and memory, is dogmatically described as a trisynaptic circuit where dentate gyrus granule cells (GCs), CA3 pyramidal neurons (PNs), and CA1 PNs are serially connected. However, CA3 also forms an autoassociative network, and its PNs have diverse morphologies, intrinsic properties, and GC input levels. How PN subtypes compose this recurrent network is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Biosci
June 2025
Department of Physiology, School of Integrative Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 1200 Cailun Road, Shanghai, 201203, China.
Anxiety occurs in the early stage of cognitive disorders, which can exacerbate cognitive impairment. However, the pathogenesis of this kind of anxiety remains unclear. In this study, we investigated anxiety-like behaviors in young adult presenilin 1/2 conditional double knockout (PS cDKO) mice, a model of progressive cognitive impairment, using behavioral tests and electrophysiological recordings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
June 2025
Institute of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, Foundation for Research and Technology Hellas, Heraklion, Greece.
The synaptic mechanisms driving feature selectivity in specific neuron types remains a fundamental and unresolved challenge in neuroscience. In hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons (PNs), the development of place selectivity, manifested as place fields, is believed to result from dendritic integration of spatially distributed inputs combined with behavioral time scale plasticity (BTSP). BTSP involves dendritic spikes that temporally regulate synaptic potentiation and depotentiation.
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