Tau Pathology Drives Dementia Risk-Associated Gene Networks toward Chronic Inflammatory States and Immunosuppression

Jessica E. Rexach(University of California, Los Angeles), Damon Polioudakis(University of California, Los Angeles), Anna Yin(University of California, Los Angeles), Vivek Swarup(University of California, Los Angeles), Timothy S. Chang(University of California, Los Angeles), Tam Nguyen(University of California, Los Angeles), Arjun Sarkar(University of California, Los Angeles), Lawrence Chen(University of California, Los Angeles), Jerry I. Huang(University of California, Los Angeles), Li‐Chun Lin(University of California, San Francisco), William W. Seeley(University of California, San Francisco), John Q. Trojanowski(University of Pennsylvania), Dheeraj Malhotra(Roche (Switzerland)), Daniel H. Geschwind(University of California, Los Angeles)
Cell Reports
November 1, 2020
Cited by 100Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

To understand how neural-immune-associated genes and pathways contribute to neurodegenerative disease pathophysiology, we performed a systematic functional genomic analysis in purified microglia and bulk tissue from mouse and human AD, FTD, and PSP. We uncover a complex temporal trajectory of microglial-immune pathways involving the type 1 interferon response associated with tau pathology in the early stages, followed by later signatures of partial immune suppression and, subsequently, the type 2 interferon response. We find that genetic risk for dementias shows disease-specific patterns of pathway enrichment. We identify drivers of two gene co-expression modules conserved from mouse to human, representing competing arms of microglial-immune activation (NAct) and suppression (NSupp) in neurodegeneration. We validate our findings by using chemogenetics, experimental perturbation data, and single-cell sequencing in post-mortem brains. Our results refine the understanding of stage- and disease-specific microglial responses, implicate microglial viral defense pathways in dementia pathophysiology, and highlight therapeutic windows.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis