4.7 Article

Microglial large extracellular vesicles propagate early synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease

期刊

BRAIN
卷 145, 期 8, 页码 2849-2868

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awac083

关键词

microglia; extracellular vesicles; amyloid-beta; Alzheimer's disease; long-term potentiation

资金

  1. American National Institutes of Health (NIH) [1R56AG056108-01]
  2. Alzheimer's Association Research Fellowship (AARF) [2018-AARF-588984]
  3. Italian Multiple Sclerosis Foundation (FISM) [2018/R/22]
  4. '5 per mille' public funding
  5. FISM senior research fellowship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study reveals that microglial extracellular vesicles carrying amyloid-beta can move along axons and spread synaptic dysfunction. Inhibiting the motion of these vesicles restricts the spread of dysfunction, suggesting a potential strategy to delay Alzheimer's disease progression.
Gabrielli et al. show that microglial extracellular vesicles carrying amyloid-beta (A beta-EVs) move along axons and propagate synaptic dysfunction in the mouse brain in vitro. However, inhibiting A beta-EV motion restricts the spread of synaptic dysfunction, unveiling a potential new strategy to delay Alzheimer's disease progression. Synaptic dysfunction is an early mechanism in Alzheimer's disease that involves progressively larger areas of the brain over time. However, how it starts and propagates is unknown. Here we show that amyloid-beta released by microglia in association with large extracellular vesicles (A beta-EVs) alters dendritic spine morphology in vitro, at the site of neuron interaction, and impairs synaptic plasticity both in vitro and in vivo in the entorhinal cortex-dentate gyrus circuitry. One hour after A beta-EV injection into the mouse entorhinal cortex, long-term potentiation was impaired in the entorhinal cortex but not in the dentate gyrus, its main target region, while 24 h later it was also impaired in the dentate gyrus, revealing a spreading of long-term potentiation deficit between the two regions. Similar results were obtained upon injection of extracellular vesicles carrying A beta naturally secreted by CHO7PA2 cells, while neither A beta(42) alone nor inflammatory extracellular vesicles devoid of A beta were able to propagate long-term potentiation impairment. Using optical tweezers combined to time-lapse imaging to study A beta-EV-neuron interaction, we show that A beta-EVs move anterogradely at the axon surface and that their motion can be blocked through annexin-V coating. Importantly, when A beta-EV motility was inhibited, no propagation of long-term potentiation deficit occurred along the entorhinal-hippocampal circuit, implicating large extracellular vesicle motion at the neuron surface in the spreading of long-term potentiation impairment. Our data indicate the involvement of large microglial extracellular vesicles in the rise and propagation of early synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease and suggest a new mechanism controlling the diffusion of large extracellular vesicles and their pathogenic signals in the brain parenchyma, paving the way for novel therapeutic strategies to delay the disease.

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