Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Metabolic Brain Disease
Research Publisher
Springer US
Research Vol
37
Research Website
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11011-022-01029-x
Research Year
2022
Research Member
Research_Pages
1941-1957
Research Abstract
in the occurrence and development of AD. Given the link between peripheral insulin resistance and tau pathology in streptozotocin-
injected and db/db mouse models of diabetes, we fed high fat diet (HFD) to pR5 mice expressing P301L mutant
human tau, with the aim of developing a new model with characteristics of obesity, T2DM and AD to mimic AD patients
exacerbated by obesity and T2DM, an increasing trend in modern society. In our study, pR5 and C57BL/6 (WT) mice were
randomly allocated to a standard diet (STD) or HFD for 30 weeks starting at 8 weeks of age. Food intake was measured
weekly, body weight and fasting glucose levels were measured fortnightly, and a comprehensive behavioral test battery was
performed to assess anxiety, depression and cognitive dysfunction. Glucose and insulin tolerance tests were performed after
30 weeks of HFD. We also investigated the effect of long term HFD on tau pathology in the brains of WT and P301L mice
by performing western blotting of whole brain homogenates for total tau, phosphorylated tau at Ser396 and Thr231. Our
results show that pR5 mice fed with HFD are more vulnerable to diet induced obesity compared to WT, especially with
increasing age. In addition, pR5 mice on HFD developed glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. It was identified that long
term HFD significantly aggravates depression like behavior and impairs cognitive function in pR5 mice, and also induces
anxiety like behavior in both pR5 and WT mice. Long term HFD was also shown to aggravate tau hyperphosphorylation in
pR5 transgenic mice, and increase total and hyperphosphorylated tau in WT mice. These results indicate that diet induced
obesity of pR5 transgenic mice expressing P301L mutant human tau generates T2DM, and aggravates tau phosphorylation,
and is therefore a model useful for investigations that seek to understand the relationships between AD, T2DM and obesity,
and the underlying biochemical changes and mechanisms associated with metabolic disorders and AD tauopathy.