Title
Peripheral Elevation of a Klotho Fragment Enhances Brain Function and Resilience in Young, Aging, and α-Synuclein Transgenic Mice
Date Issued
08 August 2017
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of California
Publisher(s)
Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
Cognitive dysfunction and decreased mobility from aging and neurodegenerative conditions, such as Parkinson and Alzheimer diseases, are major biomedical challenges in need of more effective therapies. Increasing brain resilience may represent a new treatment strategy. Klotho, a longevity factor, enhances cognition when genetically and broadly overexpressed in its full, wild-type form over the mouse lifespan. Whether acute klotho treatment can rapidly enhance cognitive and motor functions or induce resilience is a gap in our knowledge of its therapeutic potential. Here, we show that an α-klotho protein fragment (αKL-F), administered peripherally, surprisingly induced cognitive enhancement and neural resilience despite impermeability to the blood-brain barrier in young, aging, and transgenic α-synuclein mice. αKL-F treatment induced cleavage of the NMDAR subunit GluN2B and also enhanced NMDAR-dependent synaptic plasticity. GluN2B blockade abolished αKL-F-mediated effects. Peripheral αKL-F treatment is sufficient to induce neural enhancement and resilience in mice and may prove therapeutic in humans.
Start page
1360
End page
1371
Volume
20
Issue
6
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Neurociencias
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85026873830
PubMed ID
Source
Cell Reports
ISSN of the container
2211-1247
Sponsor(s)
We thank Stephen Hauser for discussions, Ruth Huttenhain for expertise with proteomic analyses, Frederic Hopf for input on electrophysiology, and Emily Davis and Elena Minones-Moyano for assistance with tissue collection and discussions. Behavioral data were obtained in part using the Gladstone Institutes Neurobehavioral Core. This study was funded by grants from NINDS (R01 NS092918 to D.B.D.), the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health, through UCSF-CTSI (UL1 TR001872 to D.B.D.), the American Federation for Aging Research (to D.B.D.), the Glenn Medical Foundation (to D.B.D.), and the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation (to A.L.B.). The study was also funded by gifts from Unity Biotechnology (to D.B.D.), the Bakar Foundation (to D.B.D.), the Bradley Foundation (to D.B.D.), and the Coulter-Weeks Foundation (to D.B.D.). Portions of this work are the subject of a provisional patent application held by the Regents of the University of California.
Sources of information:
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