Michelle C. Janelsins

B.S. Ursinus College
M.S. and Ph.D. University of Rochester

Then Now

Thesis Title

Inflammation in Alzheimer's Disease: Implicating Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha as a Key Mediator of Disease Pathogenesis

Defense Date

April 11, 2008

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder that progressively impairs intellectual and emotional functioning in afflicted individuals.   The disease is characterized pathologically by a temporal and spatial advancement of amyloid-beta (A-beta) deposition, neurofibrillary tangle formation, synaptic degeneration, and neuronal loss.   Inflammatory processes have been implicated in initiating and/or propagating AD-associated pathology within the brain, as inflammatory cytokine expression and other markers of inflammation are pronounced in individuals with AD pathology.   We utilized the 3xTg-AD mouse model (which harbors pathological features similar to human AD) to first identify inflammatory molecule(s) present in the brain prior to overt classical pathologies.    We observed a significant 14.8-fold and 10.8-fold up-regulation in transcript levels of the proinflammatory cytokine, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and chemokine, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), respectively, specifically within the entorhinal cortex of these mice but not age-matched controls.   Interestingly, correlative increases in numbers of F4/80-positive microglia/macrophage cells were regionally enhanced with respect to TNF-alpha and MCP-1 expression within the entorhinal cortex. Both microglia and neurons were found to express TNF-alpha transcripts.   To further define the role of neuronally derived TNF-alpha in early AD pathogenesis, a recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vector expressing TNF-alpha was constructed and stereotactically delivered to "pre-pathologic" 3xTg-AD mice and non-transgenic (Non-Tg) control mice.    Neuronal over-expression of TNF-alpha for 4 months hastened intracellular A-beta accumulation in 3xTg-AD mice with concomitant enhancement in microglial staining intensities.   Following chronic neuronal expression of TNF-alpha in 3xTg-AD and Non-Tg mice for 10 months, significant transcriptional enhancement of TNF receptor II (TNFRII) and Jun-related genes with coincident neuronal death specifically within the brains of 3xTg-AD mice was observed.   This indicates that chronic TNF-alpha expression alone is insufficiently neurotoxic, but that a pathologic interaction exists between TNF-alpha and the AD-related transgene products expressed by neurons in the 3xTg-AD mouse brain.   These studies provide in vivo evidence for chronic neuronal TNF-alpha expression as a key mediator in perpetuating AD-related inflammatory events, and ultimately, neuronal death.

Commencement Day (May 17, 2008)

Home

Research Overview

Lab Members

Lab Alumni

Graduate Student Thesis Defense Pages

Rotation Projects

Positions Available

Publications

Useful Links

Contact Info

 

Center for Neural Development and Disease

University of Rochester Medical Center

 


© Copyright University of Rochester Medical Center, 2004. Disclaimer.
For questions or suggestions concerning the content of these pages, contact the URMC Webmaster.