Effects of gonadectomy on brain sex hormone levels and amyloid pathology in male and female App NL‐G‐F and App NL‐F mice
Patricia Muñoz, Heba G. Ali, Aphrodite Demetriou, Maria Latorre‐Leal, Makoto Shimozawa, Ljerka Delac, Tudor‐Fabian Troncea‐Sandu, Jose Inzunza, Per Nilsson, Silvia Maioli, Ivan Nalvarte

TL;DR
This study explores how removing sex hormones affects brain health and Alzheimer's pathology in male and female mice.
Contribution
The study reveals sex-specific effects of gonadectomy on amyloid pathology and brain hormone levels in Alzheimer's mouse models.
Findings
Male gonadectomy improved learning and reduced amyloid in the App NL-G-F model.
Gonadectomy worsened amyloid pathology in both sexes in the App NL-F model.
Low testosterone levels associate with increased IGF-1 expression, possibly compensating for estrogenic signaling.
Abstract
More women than men are diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Sex hormones have been ascribed neuroprotective properties, and their decline, particularly the reduction of estrogen during menopause, has been implicated in AD risk. In this study, we examined how loss of circulating sex hormones affects cognitive performance and amyloid pathology in two mouse models of AD, the aggressive App NL‐G‐F and the slower App NL‐F models of brain amyloidosis. Bilateral gonadectomy was induced in both male and female App NL‐G‐F and App NL‐F mice. Pathology was assessed using cognitive tests and histological evaluations of amyloid depositions and neuroinflammation. Serum and brain estrogen and testosterone levels were measured by ELISA, and the expression of key estrogenic signaling genes was evaluated using qPCR. We report that female gonadectomy had little impact on behavior or pathology…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMenopause: Health Impacts and Treatments · Stress Responses and Cortisol · Cancer-related cognitive impairment studies
