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Low-grade systemic inflammation stimulates microglial turnover and accelerates the onset of Alzheimer’s-like pathology

Low-grade systemic inflammation stimulates microglial turnover and accelerates the onset of Alzheimer’s-like pathology
Low-grade systemic inflammation stimulates microglial turnover and accelerates the onset of Alzheimer’s-like pathology
Several in vivo studies have shown that systemic inflammation, mimicked by LPS, triggers an inflammatory response in the CNS, driven by microglia, characterised by an increase in inflammatory cytokines and associated sickness behaviour. However, most studies induce relatively high systemic inflammation, not directly compared with the more common low grade inflammatory events experienced in humans during the life course. Using mice, we investigated the effects of low-grade systemic inflammation during an otherwise healthy early life, and how this may pre-condition the onset and severity of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-like pathology. Our results indicate that low grade systemic inflammation induces sub-threshold brain inflammation and promotes microglial proliferation driven by the CSF1R pathway, contrary to the effects caused by high systemic inflammation. In addition, repeated systemic challenges with low grade LPS induce disease-associated microglia. Finally, using an inducible model of AD-like pathology (Line 102 mice), we observed that pre-conditioning with repeated doses of low-grade systemic inflammation, prior to APP induction, promotes a
detrimental effect later in life, leading to an increase in Ab accumulation and disease-associated microglia. These results support the notion that episodic low grade systemic inflammation has the potential to influence the onset and severity of age-related neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease.
0894-1491
Guerrero-Carrasco, Monica
6c5aad1c-0594-47ab-83f4-9098164ad294
Targett, Imogen Louisa
50fce49e-7c94-4f03-9fcd-6d159ddff4f9
Olmos-Alonso, Adrian
c52c3bd9-2cf0-4b55-9214-cb549449db75
Vargas-Caballero, Mariana
de2178ac-77fd-4748-9fe5-109ab8ad93e1
Gomez-Nicola, Diego
0680aa66-9dee-47cf-a8d3-e39c988f85b5
et al.
Guerrero-Carrasco, Monica
6c5aad1c-0594-47ab-83f4-9098164ad294
Targett, Imogen Louisa
50fce49e-7c94-4f03-9fcd-6d159ddff4f9
Olmos-Alonso, Adrian
c52c3bd9-2cf0-4b55-9214-cb549449db75
Vargas-Caballero, Mariana
de2178ac-77fd-4748-9fe5-109ab8ad93e1
Gomez-Nicola, Diego
0680aa66-9dee-47cf-a8d3-e39c988f85b5

Guerrero-Carrasco, Monica, Targett, Imogen Louisa and Olmos-Alonso, Adrian , et al. (2024) Low-grade systemic inflammation stimulates microglial turnover and accelerates the onset of Alzheimer’s-like pathology. GLIA. (doi:10.1101/2024.03.15.585224).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Several in vivo studies have shown that systemic inflammation, mimicked by LPS, triggers an inflammatory response in the CNS, driven by microglia, characterised by an increase in inflammatory cytokines and associated sickness behaviour. However, most studies induce relatively high systemic inflammation, not directly compared with the more common low grade inflammatory events experienced in humans during the life course. Using mice, we investigated the effects of low-grade systemic inflammation during an otherwise healthy early life, and how this may pre-condition the onset and severity of Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-like pathology. Our results indicate that low grade systemic inflammation induces sub-threshold brain inflammation and promotes microglial proliferation driven by the CSF1R pathway, contrary to the effects caused by high systemic inflammation. In addition, repeated systemic challenges with low grade LPS induce disease-associated microglia. Finally, using an inducible model of AD-like pathology (Line 102 mice), we observed that pre-conditioning with repeated doses of low-grade systemic inflammation, prior to APP induction, promotes a
detrimental effect later in life, leading to an increase in Ab accumulation and disease-associated microglia. These results support the notion that episodic low grade systemic inflammation has the potential to influence the onset and severity of age-related neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease.

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 March 2024
Published date: 10 April 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488662
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488662
ISSN: 0894-1491
PURE UUID: 068fdfcf-dcfc-45bd-a1e9-495981da0810
ORCID for Mariana Vargas-Caballero: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2326-4001
ORCID for Diego Gomez-Nicola: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5316-2682

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Date deposited: 04 Apr 2024 16:33
Last modified: 11 Apr 2024 01:44

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Contributors

Author: Monica Guerrero-Carrasco
Author: Adrian Olmos-Alonso
Corporate Author: et al.

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