4.5 Review

APOE-modulated Aβ-induced neuroinflammation in Alzheimer's disease: current landscape, novel data, and future perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 133, Issue 4, Pages 465-488

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.13072

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; amyloid-beta; apolipoprotein E; interleukin-4 receptor; neuroinflammation; toll-like receptor 4

Funding

  1. NIH/NIA [P01AG030128, R21AG048498]
  2. NIH/NINDS [R01NS064247]
  3. University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC)
  4. Center for Clinical and Translational Science Grant [UL1RR029879]
  5. UIC OVCR grant
  6. NIH (University of Illinois CTSA) [UL1TR000050]

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Chronic glial activation and neuroinflammation induced by the amyloid-beta peptide (A beta) contribute to Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. APOE4 is the greatest AD-genetic risk factor; increasing risk up to 12-fold compared to APOE3, with APOE4-specific neuroinflammation an important component of this risk. This editorial review discusses the role of APOE in inflammation and AD, via a literature review, presentation of novel data on A beta-induced neuroinflammation, and discussion of future research directions. The complexity of chronic neuroinflammation, including multiple detrimental and beneficial effects occurring in a temporal and cell-specific manner, has resulted in conflicting functional data for virtually every inflammatory mediator. Defining a neuroinflammatory phenotype (NIP) is one way to address this issue, focusing on profiling the changes in inflammatory mediator expression during disease progression. Although many studies have shown that APOE4 induces a detrimental NIP in peripheral inflammation and A beta-independent neuroinflammation, data for APOE-modulated A beta-induced neuroinflammation are surprisingly limited. We present data supporting the hypothesis that impaired apoE4 function modulates A beta-induced effects on inflammatory receptor signaling, including amplification of detrimental (toll-like receptor 4-p38 alpha) and suppression of beneficial (IL-4R-nuclear receptor) pathways. To ultimately develop APOE genotype-specific therapeutics, it is critical that future studies define the dynamic NIP profile and pathways that underlie APOE-modulated chronic neuroinflammation.

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