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Altered synaptic ingestion by human microglia in Alzheimer’s disease

Authors :
Tzioras, Makis
Daniels, Michael J.D.
King, Declan
Popovic, Karla
Holloway, Rebecca K.
Stevenson, Anna J.
Tulloch, Jane
Kandasamy, Jothy
Sokol, Drahoslav
Latta, Clare
Rose, Jamie
Smith, Colin
Miron, Veronique E.
Henstridge, Christopher
McColl, Barry W.
Spires-Jones, Tara L.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Synapse loss correlates strongly with cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s disease, but the mechanisms underpinning this phenomenon remain unclear. Recent evidence from mouse models points to microglial cells as mediators of synapse removal, and human genetic evidence implicates microglia in disease risk. Here we demonstrate that microglia from human postmortem brain contain synaptic proteins and that greater amounts are observed in microglia from Alzheimer’s compared to non-diseased brain tissue. Further, we observe that primary human adult microglia phagocytose synapses isolated from human brain, and that AD brain-derived synapses are phagocytosed more rapidly and abundantly than controls. Together, these data show that synapses in the human AD brain are more prone to ingestion by microglia. Our findings provide evidence from human tissue implicating altered microglial-mediated synaptic uptake in AD pathobiology. One Sentence Summary AD alters synapse ingestion by microglia

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.sharebioRxiv..9e7bdbdeab8b10888e467111e5055948
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/795930