4.8 Article

Alzheimer's Patient Microglia Exhibit Enhanced Aging and Unique Transcriptional Activation

期刊

CELL REPORTS
卷 31, 期 13, 页码 -

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.107843

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资金

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [U24 NS072026]
  2. National Institute on Aging [P30 AG19610]
  3. Arizona Department of Health Services [211002]
  4. Arizona Biomedical Research Commission [4001, 0011, 05901, 1001]
  5. Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research

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Damage-associated microglia (DAM) profiles observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related mouse models reflect an activation state that could modulate AD risk or progression. To learn whether human AD microglia (HAM) display a similar profile, we develop a method for purifying cell types from frozen cerebrocortical tissues for RNA-seq analysis, allowing better transcriptome coverage than typical single-nucleus RNA-seq approaches. The HAM profile we observe bears little resemblance to the DAM profile. Instead, HAM display an enhanced human aging profile, in addition to other disease-related changes such as APOE upregulation. Analyses of whole-tissue RNA-seq and single-cell/nucleus RNA-seq datasets corroborate our findings and suggest that the lack of DAM response in human microglia occurs specifically in AD tissues, not other neurodegenerative settings. These results, which can be browsed at http://research-pub.gene.com/BrainMyeloidLandscape, provide a genome-wide picture of microglial activation in human AD and highlight considerable differences between mouse models and human disease.

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