Background: Apolipoprotein A-II (ApoA-II), a major apoprotein of serum high density lipoprotein (HDL) deposits as an amyloid fibril (AApoAII) in murine senile amyloidosis. Type C ApoA-II gene (Apoa2c) in the SAMP1 strain of mice, a murine model of severe senile amyloidosis and accelerated senescence was transferred on the genetic background of the SAMR1 strain, in which senile amyloidosis is rare and has a normal aging process, and a congenic strain of mouse (R1.P1-Apoa2c) was developed (Higuchi K, Kitado H, Kitagawa K, Kogishi K, Naiki H, Takeda T. FEBS Lett 1993;317:207-10).
Experimental design: We identified AApoAII amyloid deposits in the 14-month-old congenic R1.P1-Apoa2c strain and compared these findings with the deposits in the progenitor SAMP1 and SAMR1 strains. The progression of senescence was estimated using a grading system and the age-associated changes in the metabolism of ApoA-II and HDL were investigated in the three strains of mice.
Results: At 14 months of age, severe amyloid deposition as compared with the donor SAMP1 strain was present in the congenic R1.P1-Apoa2c strain, but AApoAII was not evident in the progenitor SAMR1 strain which has type B ApoA-II. No obvious differences in the progression of senescence were observed between the R1.P1-Apoa2c and SAMR1 strains. In the R1.P1-Apoa2c strain, the serum HDL-cholesterol concentrations decreased in parallel with ApoA-II levels with advancing age and the decrease was much accelerated compared with the decrease seen in SAMR1 mice.
Conclusions: Based on these results, we propose that the genetic type of ApoA-II plays an important role in the development of senile amyloidosis and age-associated changes in HDL metabolism. However, it has a minor role in the accelerated senescence in the mouse strains we used.