Transgenic mice expressing HIV-1 coat glycoprotein gp120 in brain glial cells were previously shown to display AIDS dementia-like neuropathological changes and reduced hippocampal long-term potentiation. In this report, neuromotor and cognitive performance in 3- and 12-month-old gp120-expressing mice was compared with wildtype controls. Rotarod and cage activity measures showed no significant differences between transgenic animals and controls of either age. Open field activity was slightly altered in 12-month-old gp120 animals (reduced corner crossings and dwell in centre), but not in the 3-month-olds. Cognitive assessment using the Morris water maze showed unimpaired performance in 3-month-old mice during acquisition and (no-platform) probe trials. In 12-month-old gp120 animals, escape latency and swimming velocity during the acquisition trials were significantly reduced, but performance improved at roughly the same rate as in control animals. However, the probe trials revealed a highly significant reduction in spatial retention in transgenic mice of this age. This demonstration of age-dependent impairments in open field activity and spatial reference memory may relate to cognitive and neuromotor deficits seen in a proportion of HIV-1-infected individuals.
Transgenic APP23 mice were generated to model Alzheimer's disease. The APP23 model develops pathological features, learning deficits, and memory deficits analogous to dementing patients. In this report, transgenic mice exhibited several behavioral disturbances indicating the presence of neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia. Aiming to verify whether the model also develops other behavioral problems, the authors investigated ingestive behavior in APP23 males of 3, 6 and 12 months. In addition, body weights of a naive male group were longitudinally monitored starting at weaning. Olfactory acuity was evaluated in mice of different age groups. Although olfactory functioning of APP23 mice appeared intact, they drank more and took more food pellets compared with wild-type littermates during a 1-week registration period. From the age of 4.5 weeks onward, APP23 males weighed significantly less than their control littermates, whereas this difference became more prominent with increasing age. Our results suggest the presence of a hypermetabolic state in this model. This is the first report, evidencing the presence of changes in eating and drinking behavior in a single transgenic Alzheimer mouse model.
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