Interferon drives cognitive impairment in Alzheimer鈥檚 disease model
Alzheimer鈥檚 disease (AD), the most common type of dementia, progressively impairs memory, concentration and the ability to learn new things and accomplish everyday activities. Although scientists do not yet fully understand the causes of cognitive impairment associated with AD, a group of researchers at 草榴社区入口 has discovered that type I interferon (IFN), an inflammation-eliciting molecule abnormally produced in the AD brain, is a major driver of memory and cognitive loss in a mouse model of the disease. Importantly, blocking IFN reversed these memory and cognitive deficits in the animal model.
The team reports in the journal that AD mice that were treated to block the effects of IFN specifically in the brain recovered from their memory and cognitive deficits, despite persistent 尾-amyloid plaques, which is a characteristic of human brains with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and initiates the progression toward dementia. The study highlights the importance of inflammation in the AD brain and provides an improved understanding of the complex events involved in the development of this devastating condition.
鈥淭he current understanding is that, in addition to having 尾-amyloid plaques and tau protein tangles, the brains of patients with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease have a marked inflammatory response, which might be more of a problem than plaques themselves,鈥 said corresponding author Dr. Wei Cao. She was an associate professor of molecular and human genetics and the Huffington Center on Aging at Baylor during the development of this project. She is currently a professor of anesthesiology at UT Health-Houston.
In their previous study, Cao and her colleagues uncovered evidence that certain kinds of 尾-amyloid plaques activate microglia, resident immune cells of the brain, which then produce IFN. That in turn triggers a cascade of inflammatory reactions that lead to the loss of synapses, the junctions between neurons through which they communicate. Synapse loss is a key part of neurodegeneration and can lead to memory loss and eventually dementia. They found evidence of this crucial role of IFN both in animal models and in samples from patients with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.
In the current study, the researchers worked with an animal model of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, specifically with old mice that present with significant disease progression, including memory and cognitive decline when tested in memory assays. The researchers investigated the effect of IFN on memory and cognition using different approaches such as therapeutic antibody blockade and genetic knockouts.
鈥淲e were intrigued by the striking findings from these AD mice,鈥 Cao said. 鈥淲e found that the IFN-mediated inflammation pathway is rather harmful to the synapses, affecting memory and cognitive performance, and that, importantly, blocking the pathway restores these cognitive abilities.鈥
Interestingly, the team also found that certain, but not all, microglia were activated by IFN, as were other cells in the brain, such as neurons, astrocytes and blood vessels. 鈥淥ur findings point to another layer of the complexity of IFN activation under AD conditions that hasn鈥檛 been fully appreciated,鈥 explained first author, Dr. Ethan Roy, a postdoctoral researcher in the Cao lab.
鈥淎nother novel aspect of this work is that we have found different functions of IFN signaling for different types of cells in the brain, using genetic strategies,鈥 Roy said. 鈥淭he full mechanism of synaptic loss requires concerted actions from different cells.鈥
The group also detected less amyloid plaques when neural cells were unable to respond to IFN. 鈥淎myloid plaques trigger IFN production, then IFN activation promotes more plaque formation. Unfortunately, this feedforward loop is operating in AD,鈥 Cao said.
鈥淲e are now interested in investigating how IFN signaling affects later stages of AD development, and exploring developing new therapeutic strategies that target IFN pathways to slow down cognitive decline in mice and, hopefully, eventually in people,鈥 Cao said.
Other contributors to this work include Gabriel Chiu, Sanming Li, Nicholas E. Propson, Rupa Kanchi, Baiping Wang, Cristian Coarfa and Hui Zheng, all at 草榴社区入口.
The study was funded by National Institutes of Health grants (AG057587, AG020670, AG062257 and NS093652), BrightFocus (ADR A20183775), Brown Foundation 2020 Healthy Aging Initiative and Cure Alzheimer鈥檚 Fund. Further support was provided by IDDRC grant U54HD083092 from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development.