An ancient conserved role for prion protein in learning and memory

2018 
The misfolding of cellular prion protein (PrP C ) to form PrP Scrapie (PrP Sc ) is an exemplar of toxic gain-of-function mechanisms inducing propagated protein misfolding and progressive devastating neurodegeneration. Despite this, PrP C function in the brain is also reduced and subverted during prion disease progression; thus understanding the normal function of PrP C in healthy brains is key. Disrupting PrP C in mice has led to a myriad of controversial functions that sometimes map onto disease symptoms, including a proposed role in memory or learning. Intriguingly, PrP C ’s interaction with amyloid beta (Aβ) oligomers at synapses has also linked its function to Alzheimer9s disease and dementia in recent years. We set out to test the involvement of PrP C in memory using a disparate animal model, the zebrafish. Here we document an age-dependent memory decline in prp2 −/− zebrafish, pointing to a conserved and ancient role of PrP C in memory. Specifically, we found that aged (3-year old) prp2 −/− fish performed poorly in an object recognition task relative to age-matched prp2 + / + fish or 1-year old prp2 −/− fish. Further, using a novel object approach (NOA) test, we found that aged (3-year old) prp2 −/− fish approached the novel object more than either age-matched prp2 + / + fish or 1-year old prp2 −/− fish, but did not have decreased anxiety when we tested them in a novel tank diving test. Taken together, the results of the novel object approach and novel tank diving tests suggest an altered cognitive appraisal of the novel object in the 3-year old prp2 −/− fish. The learning paradigm established here enables a path forward to study PrP C interactions of relevance to Alzheimer9s disease and prion diseases, and to screen for candidate therapeutics for these diseases. The findings underpin a need to consider the relative contributions of loss- vs . gain-of-function of PrP C during Alzheimer9s and prion diseases, and have implications upon the prospects of several promising therapeutic strategies.
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