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Acta Neuropathologica
Published

Transmembrane protein 97 is a potential synaptic amyloid beta receptor in human Alzheimer's disease

Authors

Martí Colom-Cadena, Elizabeth M. Simzer, Kristjan Holt, Robert I. McGeachan, Jane Tulloch, Jamie Rose, Declan King, Caitlin Davies, Lewis Wilkins, Tara L. Spires-Jones

Abstract

Synapse loss correlates with cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Data from mouse models suggests microglia are important for synapse degeneration, but direct human evidence for any glial involvement in synapse removal in human AD remains to be established. Here we observe astrocytes and microglia from human brains contain greater amounts of synaptic protein in AD compared with non-disease controls, and that proximity to amyloid-β plaques and the APOE4 risk gene exacerbate this effect. In culture, mouse and human astrocytes and primary mouse and human microglia phagocytose AD patient-derived synapses more than synapses from controls. Inhibiting interactions of MFG-E8 rescues the elevated engulfment of AD synapses by astrocytes and microglia without affecting control synapse uptake. Thus, AD promotes increased synapse ingestion by human glial cells at least in part via an MFG-E8 opsonophagocytic mechanism with potential for targeted therapeutic manipulation.

UK DRI Authors

Tara Spires-Jones

Prof Tara Spires-Jones

Group Leader

Deciphering why synapses and neurons degenerate and whether boosting resilience of synapses can protect the brain

Prof Tara Spires-Jones