Sortilin is a member of the family of vacuolar protein sorting 10 protein domain receptors which has
emerged as a co-receptor in cell death and neurodegeneration processes mediated by proneurotrophins.
Here we tested the possibility that sortilin deficiency interferes with behavioral and neuropathological
endpoints in a chronic Nerve Growth factor (NGF)-deprivation model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the
AD10 anti-NGF mouse. AD10 mice show cholinergic deficit, increased APP processing and tau hyperphosphorylation,
resulting in behavioral deficits in learning and memory paradigms assessed by novel
object recognition and Morris water maze tests. Sort1/ mice were crossed with AD10 anti-NGF mice
and the neurodegenerative phenotype was studied. We found that the loss of sortilin partially protected
AD10 anti-NGF mice from neurodegeneration. A protective effect was observed on non-spatial memory
as assessed by novel object recognition, and histopathologically at the level of Ab and BFCNs, while the
phosphotau increase was unaltered by knocking out sortilin. We suggest that sortilin might be involved
in different aspects of neurodegeneration in a complex way, supporting the view that sortilin functions in
the CNS are broader than being a co-receptor in proneurotrophin and neurotrophin signaling
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