4.7 Article

The clock modulator Nobiletin mitigates astrogliosis-associated neuroinflammation and disease hallmarks in an Alzheimer's disease model

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202101633R

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; A beta pathology; circadian clock; neuroinflammation; Nobiletin (NOB); ROR nuclear receptors

Funding

  1. HHS \ NIH \ National Institute on Aging (NIA) [RF1AG061901]

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder and there is a need for disease-modifying factors and interventions. The natural compound Nobiletin (NOB) has been found to alleviate beta-amyloid burden and improve cognitive function in AD mice. It also regulates clock and clock-controlled AD gene expression, inhibits neuroinflammation, and reduces astrogliosis in these mice. These results highlight the potential beneficial effects of a clock modulator in mitigating AD pathology and cognitive impairments.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder, and there is a pressing need to identify disease-modifying factors and devise interventional strategies. The circadian clock, our intrinsic biological timer, orchestrates various cellular and physiological processes including gene expression, sleep, and neuroinflammation; conversely, circadian dysfunctions are closely associated with and/or contribute to AD hallmarks. We previously reported that the natural compound Nobiletin (NOB) is a clock-enhancing modulator that promotes physiological health and healthy aging. In the current study, we treated the double transgenic AD model mice, APP/PS1, with NOB-containing diets. NOB significantly alleviated beta-amyloid burden in both the hippocampus and the cortex, and exhibited a trend to improve cognitive function in these mice. While several systemic parameters for circadian wheel-running activity, sleep, and metabolism were unchanged, NOB treatment showed a marked effect on the expression of clock and clock-controlled AD gene expression in the cortex. In accordance, cortical proteomic profiling demonstrated circadian time-dependent restoration of the protein landscape in APP/PS1 mice treated with NOB. More importantly, we found a potent efficacy of NOB to inhibit proinflammatory cytokine gene expression and inflammasome formation in the cortex, and immunostaining further revealed a specific effect to diminish astrogliosis, but not microgliosis, by NOB in APP/PS1 mice. Together, these results underscore beneficial effects of a clock modulator to mitigate pathological and cognitive hallmarks of AD, and suggest a possible mechanism via suppressing astrogliosis-associated neuroinflammation.

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