Journal
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 31, Issue 16, Pages 6208-6220Publisher
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0299-11.2011
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Funding
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research
- Neuroscience Canada
- Alzheimer Society of Canada
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Circulating monocytoid cells have the ability to infiltrate nervous tissue, differentiate into microglia, and clear amyloid-beta (A beta) from the brain of mouse models of Alzheimer's disease. Interaction between the chemokine CCL2 and its CC chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2) plays a critical role in the recruitment of inflammatory monocytes into the injured/diseased brain. Here, we show that CCR2 deficiency aggravates mnesic deficits and amyloid pathology in transgenic mice expressing the chimeric mouse/human beta-amyloid precursor protein and presenilin 1 (APP(Swe)/PS1). Indeed, memory impairment was accelerated and enhanced in APP(Swe)/PS1/CCR2(-/-) mice. Apparition of cognitive decline occurred earlier (i.e., at 3 months of age before plaque formation) and correlated with intracellular accumulation of soluble oligomeric forms of A beta . Memory deficits worsened with age and were aggravated in APP(Swe)/PS1/CCR2(-/-) mice compared with their respective control groups. Soluble A beta assemblies increased significantly in APP(Swe)/PS1 mice in a context of CCR2 deficiency, whereas the plaque load remained relatively similar in the brain of aging APP(Swe)/PS1 and APP(Swe)/PS1/CCR2(-/-) mice. However, CCR2 deficiency stimulated the expression of TGF-beta 1, TGF-beta receptors, and CX(3)CR1 transcripts in plaque-associated microglia, a pattern that is characteristic of an antiinflammatory subset of myeloid cells. Adecreased expression of CCR2 could play a potential role in the etiology of Alzheimer's disease, a neurodegenerative pathology that could be treated by a genetic upregulation of the transgene in monocytoid cells.
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