2Protein Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushchino 142290, Moscow Region, Russia; fax: (7-095) 924-049
* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Received January 23, 2003; Revision received June 17, 2003
Six weeks after bilateral olfactory bulbectomy, a peptide with molecular weight of 4 kD was revealed in extracts of the neocortex and hippocampus from mice. Using monoclonal antibodies 4G8, this peptide was identified as beta-amyloid. Its level was significantly higher in the bulbectomized animals than in sham-operated mice. The bulbectomized mice displayed sharp impairment in spatial memory when tested in the Morris water maze. The results suggest that bulbectomy initiates in the brain a pathological process similar to human Alzheimer's disease in location, biochemistry, and behavioral manifestations.
KEY WORDS: sporadic Alzheimer's disease, animal models of human diseases, bulbectomy, beta-amyloid, spatial memory