APOE4 impairs Microglia ‐ Astrocyte Crosstalk in Alzheimer Disease

Kilian Kleemann(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Neta Rosenzweig(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Zhuoran Yin(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Xiaoming Zhang(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Wesley Nogueira Brandão(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Milica A. Margeta(Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary), Caitlin M. Schroeder(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Sebastian Silveira(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Christian Gauthier(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Dania Mallah(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Kristen Pitts(Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary), Shawn Herron(Boston University), H. H. Shorey(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Michael Aronchik(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Chao Wang(Washington University in St. Louis), Nimansha Jain(Washington University in St. Louis), Xin Bao(Washington University in St. Louis), Nieske Brouwer(University Medical Center Groningen), Caroline Baufeld(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Susanne Krasemann(Universität Hamburg), Bart J. L. Eggen(University Medical Center Groningen), Clary B. Clish(Broad Institute), Rudolph E. Tanzi(Massachusetts General Hospital), Charlotte Madore(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Sam Wakelin(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jared Rhee(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Yiran Cheng(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jen‐Li Barry(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Anthony Yung(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Emma Gerrits(University Medical Center Groningen), Amy Deik(Broad Institute), Daniel G. Tenen(Harvard University), Nicolás Santander(University of California, San Francisco), Tsuneya Ikezu(Boston University), Gabriel L. McKinsey(University of California, San Francisco), Dean Sheppard(University of California, San Francisco), Thomas D. Arnold(University of California, San Francisco), Ana Durao(Brigham and Women's Hospital), David M. Holtzman(Washington University in St. Louis), Oleg Butovsky(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
Alzheimer s & Dementia
December 1, 2023
Cited by 1Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Background APOE4 is the major genetic risk factor for late‐onset Alzheimer Disease (AD). APOE signaling is critical for the transition of homeostatic microglia to the neurodegenerative phenotype (MGnD). The intrinsic role of APOE4 in microglia and its contribution to AD is unclear. Method Generation of Cx3cr1‐CRE ERT2 mice crossed to APOE‐KI(APOE3 and APOE4) fl/fl injected with labeled apoptotic neurons (MGnD‐Pardigm) on WT or APP/PS1 background. Microglia and astrocytes were isolated and sequenced using either bulk RNA‐seq (MGnD‐Paradigm) or single‐cell RNA‐seq (APP/PS1). Crosstalk between cells was determined using the NichenetR database and validated using 1) Recombinant Lgals3 intracranial injection into APP/PS1 mice and 2) Adoptive transfer of microglia, from APOE3‐KI, APOE4‐KI and APOE4‐cKO mice challenged with labeled apoptotic neurons, into WT mice and isolation of astrocytes. Result Expression of APOE4 in microglia impaired MGnD‐transition in response to neurodegeneration and in APP/PS1 mice. Conditional deletion of APOE4 in microglia restored MGnD phenotype and reduced plaque pathology. Furthermore, increased astrocytic recruitment towards plaques and their activation by increased Gfap and Serpina3n expression was identified. Microglial Lgals3 was determined as critical crosstalk effector to promote astrocyte response to plaque pathology and acute neurodegeneration. AD female APOE4 carriers showed impaired induction of MGnD signature genes and astrocyte activation, including LGALS3 and GFAP respectively, supporting a conserved disease mechanism in a sex‐dependent manner. Conclusion APOE4 impairs MGnD‐microglia in AD and prevents their crosstalk with astrocytes. Lgals3 is identified as important positive regulator for microglia–astrocyte crosstalk in response to AD pathology and provides a potential therapeutic target for treatment of AD.


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