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Chilean degus are really good models for Alzheimer’s

Long-lived Chilean rodents called degus are better models for studying Alzheimer's disease in humans than mice and rats.
A brown degus stands on soil looking past the camera.

A long-lived Chilean rodent is a useful and practical model of natural sporadic Alzheimer’s disease, according to new research.

The rodent is called Octodon degus (degu).

“We found robust neurodegenerative features in cognitively impaired aged degus, including hippocampal neuronal loss, altered parvalbumin, and perineuronal net staining in the cortex, and increased c-Fos neuronal activation in the cortex that is consistent with the neural circuit hyperactivity that are commonly reported in human Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients,” says study corresponding author Xiangmin Xu, professor of anatomy and neurobiology in the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, and director of the Center for Neural Circuit Mapping (CNCM).

“By focusing on a subset of aged degus that show AD-like behavioral deficits and correlative neuropathology, we establish outbred degus as a natural model of sporadic AD and demonstrate the potential importance of wild-type outbred genetic backgrounds for AD pathogenesis.”

The need to settle earlier debates of whether degus can be a useful natural model of AD motivated the researchers to conduct the study.

There is a critical need for non-murine, natural animal models for Alzheimer’s research as particularly highlighted by the NIH RFA “New/Unconventional Animal Models of Alzheimer’s Disease.” The handful of published papers on degus of differing genetic backgrounds yield inconsistent findings about sporadic AD-like pathological features, with notably differing results between lab in-bred degus versus outbred degus.

“We suspect that inconsistent findings between different studies may have been due to comparing neuropathology results from laboratory in-bred colonies versus more genetically diverse outbred degus, relatively low statistical power for sample size, and the absence of behavioral screening,” Xu says.

This study revealed that outbred, aged degus possessing both behavioral and neuropathological characteristics that resemble human AD pathologies, have clear advantages over common rodent models (mice and rats) for studying AD.

Further, a portion of the outbred degu population naturally develops additional conditions similar to type-2 diabetes, macular degeneration, and atherosclerosis with age, which provides an avenue to investigate AD comorbidities in the degu.

“Our findings, taken together, show spontaneous AD-like correlative phenotypes in cognitive performance and neuropathology in aged, outbred degus. This supports that aged degus are a useful and practical model of natural sporadic AD,” says Xu.

Zhiqun Tan, an associate researcher with CNCM and UCIMIND, and B. Maximiliano Garduño, a graduate student in the anatomy and neurobiology department, are co-first authors of the paper, which appears in the journal Acta Neuropathologica Communications.

Additional coauthors are from the University of Chile and UC Irvine. The National Institutes of Health supported the work.

Source: UC Irvine

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