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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia in the elderly. AD is characterized by the deposition of two aggregated proteins: Amyloid beta (Aß) and hyperphosphorylated tau. Accumulations of these proteins are thought to be the signature of a pathogenic process causing the loss of neurons and synaptic connections associated with severe cognitive impairments in AD patients. Other important factors are involved in the neurodegeneration occurring in AD, such as neuroinflammation. In the present thesis work, we are investigating the effects of passive anti-Aß immunization. Passive anti-Aß immunization consists in the delivery of antibodies targeting Aß, with the aim to prevent its accumulation and promote the removal of pathological amyloid species. Although the treatment has been shown to clear amyloid pathology in the brain of AD patients, it has so far failed to prevent or slow down cognitive decline. Hence, it is important to determine the effects of anti-Aß immunization when administered either before or during Aß deposition, and explore how the treatment affects the Alzheimerâs manifestations in mouse models combining Aß and tau pathologies. In order to continuously deliver antibodies in AD mouse models, we used encapsulated cell technology (ECT) to implant myoblasts genetically engineered and secrete the recombinant mAb11 mouse IgG2a antibody directed against aggregated forms of Aß. Using this approach, we investigated the following three topics of research:
Hilal Lashuel, Galina Limorenko