학술논문

Brain aging is faithfully modelled in organotypic brain slices and accelerated by prions.
Document Type
Article
Source
Communications Biology. 6/21/2022, Vol. 5 Issue 1, p1-11. 11p.
Subject
*PRIONS
*SCRAPIE
*CREUTZFELDT-Jakob disease
*AGING
*PRION diseases
*AGING prevention
*AGE factors in disease
Language
ISSN
2399-3642
Abstract
Mammalian models are essential for brain aging research. However, the long lifespan and poor amenability to genetic and pharmacological perturbations have hindered the use of mammals for dissecting aging-regulatory molecular networks and discovering new anti-aging interventions. To circumvent these limitations, we developed an ex vivo model system that faithfully mimics the aging process of the mammalian brain using cultured mouse brain slices. Genome-wide gene expression analyses showed that cultured brain slices spontaneously upregulated senescence-associated genes over time and reproduced many of the transcriptional characteristics of aged brains. Treatment with rapamycin, a classical anti-aging compound, largely abolished the time-dependent transcriptional changes in naturally aged brain slice cultures. Using this model system, we discovered that prions drastically accelerated the development of age-related molecular signatures and the pace of brain aging. We confirmed this finding in mouse models and human victims of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. These data establish an innovative, eminently tractable mammalian model of brain aging, and uncover a surprising acceleration of brain aging in prion diseases. Cultured brain slices from mice spontaneously upregulate senescence-associated genes over time and reproduce the transcriptional characteristics of aged brains; prions accelerate brain aging in brain slice cultures, animal models and human patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]