Glatiramer acetate fights against Alzheimer’s disease by inducing dendritic-like microglia expressing insulin-like growth factor 1

Oleg Butovsky(Weizmann Institute of Science), Maya Koronyo‐Hamaoui(Weizmann Institute of Science), Gilad Kunis(Weizmann Institute of Science), Eran Ophir(Weizmann Institute of Science), Gennady Landa(Kaplan Medical Center), Hagit Cohen(Ben-Gurion University of the Negev), Michal Schwartz(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
July 25, 2006
Cited by 390Open Access
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by plaque formation, neuronal loss, and cognitive decline. The functions of the local and systemic immune response in this disease are still controversial. Using AD double-transgenic (APP/PS1) mice, we show that a T cell-based vaccination with glatiramer acetate, given according to a specific regimen, resulted in decreased plaque formation and induction of neurogenesis. It also reduced cognitive decline, assessed by performance in a Morris water maze. The vaccination apparently exerted its effect by causing a phenotype switch in brain microglia to dendritic-like (CD11c) cells producing insulin-like growth factor 1. In vitro findings showed that microglia activated by aggregated beta-amyloid, and characterized as CD11b(+)/CD11c(-)/MHC class II(-)/TNF-alpha(+) cells, impeded neurogenesis from adult neural stem/progenitor cells, whereas CD11b(+)/CD11c(+)/MHC class II(+)/TNF-alpha(-) microglia, a phenotype induced by IL-4, counteracted the adverse beta-amyloid-induced effect. These results suggest that dendritic-like microglia, by facilitating the necessary adjustment, might contribute significantly to the brain's resistance to AD and argue against the use of antiinflammatory drugs.


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