Microglia-derived ASC specks cross-seed amyloid-β in Alzheimer's disease
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Venegas Maldonado, Carmen Jesica; Kumar, Sathish; Franklin, Bernardo S.; Dierkes, Tobias; Brinkschulte, Rebecca; Tejera, Dario; Vieira-Saecker, Ana; Schwartz, Stephanie; Santarelli, Francesco; Kummer, Markus P.; Griep, Angelika; Gelpi, Ellen; Beilharz, Michael; Riedel, Dietmar; Golenbock, Douglas T.; Geyer, Matthias; Walter, Jochen; Latz, Eicke; Heneka, Michael T.Editorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2017-12-20Referencia bibliográfica
Venegas, Carmen et al. Microglia-derived ASC specks cross-seed amyloid-β in Alzheimer's disease. Nature 20 December 2017. DOI: 10.1038/nature25158
Patrocinador
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; Clinical Research Group KFO177, SFB670, WA1477/6, ERC InflammAct, ERC PLAT-IL-1; ERA-NET consortium TracInflam; JPND consortium InCureResumen
The spreading of pathology within and between brain areas is a hallmark of neurodegenerative disorders. In patients with Alzheimer's disease, deposition of amyloid-β is accompanied by activation of the innate immune system and involves inflammasome-dependent formation of ASC specks in microglia. ASC specks released by microglia bind rapidly to amyloid-β and increase the formation of amyloid-β oligomers and aggregates, acting as an inflammation-driven cross-seed for amyloid-β pathology. Here we show that intrahippocampal injection of ASC specks resulted in spreading of amyloid-β pathology in transgenic double-mutant APPSwePSEN1dE9 mice. By contrast, homogenates from brains of APPSwePSEN1dE9 mice failed to induce seeding and spreading of amyloid-β pathology in ASC-deficient APPSwePSEN1dE9 mice. Moreover, co-application of an anti-ASC antibody blocked the increase in amyloid-β pathology in APPSwePSEN1dE9 mice. These findings support the concept that inflammasome activation is connected to seeding and spreading of amyloid-β pathology in patients with Alzheimer's disease.





