(Press-News.org) Targeting part of an antiviral pathway triggered by the accumulation of a key pathogen shared in Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia may one day offer a new therapeutic approach to deterring or delaying cognitive decline, according to preclinical research led by Weill Cornell Medicine scientists.
The study, published April 24 in Nature Neuroscience, demonstrates that inhibiting an innate immune system enzyme called cyclic GMP–AMP synthase (cGAS) helps neurons become resilient to the build-up of the protein tau into bundles known as fibrils, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s and some forms of frontotemporal dementia, the two most common dementias in the elderly population.
“We are interested in this antiviral pathway because of its importance in modulating innate immunity—the body’s first line of defense against pathogens—which emerges as a major driver in neurodegenerative dementia,” said the study’s senior author, Dr. Li Gan, director of the Helen and Robert Appel Alzheimer’s Disease Research Institute and the Burton P. and the Judith B. Resnick Distinguished Professor in Neurodegenerative Diseases at Weill Cornell Medicine.
Dr. Gan and her colleagues studied immune cells of the nervous system called microglia. When microglia were exposed to abnormal tau, the mitochondria—or organelles that produce a cell’s energy—leaked DNA into the cell fluid. This mitochondrial DNA leakage was perceived by the immune system as a viral invasion, activating cGAS. This enzyme then triggered the sustained release of the immune system protein type I interferon (IFN-I).
“When loaded with tau protein bundles, brains get tricked into launching an antiviral response when there is actually no infection,” Dr. Gan said. The sustained IFN-I signaling from microglia decreased the activity of a protein called myocyte enhancer factor 2c (MEF2C), which is a molecular switch that provides neurons with the blueprint to function normally and resist cognitive decline. “By inhibiting the antiviral response both genetically and pharmacologically, we were able to turn the switch on to instruct normal neuronal function, even in brains loaded with tau bundles.”
The researchers investigated the antiviral pathway by conducting laboratory studies in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model. “These mice have abnormal tau accumulation in their brain and cognitive dysfunction that exacerbates with age,” said one of the first co-authors of the paper Dr. Sadaf Amin, a postdoctoral associate in neuroscience in Gan lab at the Appel Alzheimer’s Disease Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine. “Tau activates innate immune system and interferon signaling, which is switched off if we inhibit cGAS enzyme.”
The researchers used single-nuclei RNA sequencing to study gene expression in individual cells genome-wide. “We were able to evaluate changes at the single-cell level across the whole genome and pinpoint cross-talks between different cell types, meaning we could identify changes that occurred through genetic deletion of the antiviral pathway or with pharmacological inhibition,” Dr. Gan said.
Notably, removing the cGAS gene in these mice dampened the immune response of microglia and IFN-I. This preserved the function of synapses, or the communication junction between neurons and other cells, and protected against cognitive decline function regardless of the accumulation of abnormal tau protein.
“Deleting the cGAS gene preserves the function of Mef2c that renders the neurons resilient to tau pathology by limiting the interferon signaling from microglia,” said Yige Huang, another first coauthor of the paper and a doctoral candidate in the Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences in the Gan lab. The researchers were able to verify that these physiological mechanisms occur in humans using postmortem human tissue samples from Alzheimer’s patients.
In addition, the researchers discovered that a small molecule cGAS inhibitor could restore MEF2C activity and improve memory function in mice with abnormal tau proteins. The inhibitor also modulated the antiviral pathway in human microglia derived from induced pluripotent stem cells. “While further studies are needed, by suppressing the hyperactive antiviral response, we may be able to harness the brain’s resilience program, postpone the disease onset, and extend normal cognition and quality of life in dementia patients,” Dr. Gan said.
END
Interfering with antiviral pathway may deter Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia
2023-04-24
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Outstanding performance of organic solar cell using tin oxide
2023-04-24
Organic solar cells have a photoactive layer that is made from polymers and small molecules. The cells are very thin, can be flexible, and are easy to make. However, the efficiency of these cells is still much below that of conventional silicon-based ones. Applied physicists from the University of Groningen have now fabricated an organic solar cell with an efficiency of over 17 percent, which is in the top range for this type of material. It has the advantage of using an unusual device structure that is produced using a scalable technique. The design involves a conductive layer of tin oxide that is grown ...
Redox Medicine 2023: Where is the target?
2023-04-24
The 25th International Conference on Redox Medicine will take place on June 21-23 in Paris. Redox Medicine 2023 will provide a glimpse into the role of redox in tomorrow’s medicine.
What to Expect in Redox Medicine 2023?
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been studied for decades, but the results remain controversial. ROS are beneficial to biological mechanisms, acting as signaling molecules and enhancing immune defense. However, they also have harmful effects, such as causing tissue and organ damage.
Dr. Carole Nicco, stated that “The work and results presented at the Redox Medicine Congress will give ...
Small acts of kindness are frequent and universal, study finds
2023-04-24
Key takeaways
A study by researchers from UCLA, Australia, Ecuador, Germany, the Netherlands and the U.K. found that people around the world signal others for assistance every couple of minutes.
The research, which examined behaviors in towns and rural areas in several different countries, revealed that people comply with these small requests for help far more often than they decline them.
The findings suggest that people from all cultures have more similar cooperative behaviors than prior research has established.
A new study by UCLA sociologist Giovanni Rossi and an international team of collaborators finds that people rely on ...
Department of Energy to support 999 outstanding undergraduate students and 79 faculty members from institutions underrepresented in the scientific research enterprise
2023-04-24
WASHINGTON, DC – The Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Office of Science will sponsor the participation of 999 undergraduate students and 79 faculty members in three STEM-focused workforce development programs at 16 DOE national laboratories and a national fusion facility during summer 2023. Collectively, these programs ensure DOE and our nation have a strong, sustained workforce trained in the skills needed to address the energy, environment, and national security challenges of today and tomorrow.
“Our future depends on the next generation ...
Metabolism: not the limiting factor in prokaryotic endosymbiosis
2023-04-24
“One of the great mysteries of biology,” says Eric Libby, former SFI Postdoctoral Fellow, now an associate professor at the Integrated Science Lab (IceLab), Umeå University in Sweden, “is eukaryogenesis, or how eukaryotes arose.” Scientists consider this to be a period of major evolutionary transition, critical to our understanding of the history and evolution of life on Earth.
In a new study published on April 21, 2023, in PNAS, Libby worked with SFI Professor Christopher Kempes and Jordan ...
Argonne names newest Maria Goeppert Mayer and Walter Massey Fellows
2023-04-24
The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory has awarded its newest cohort of named fellowships, providing five early-career scientists with additional support as they pursue pivotal discoveries that will make Americans safer and better off and increase our understanding of the universe.
For 2023, the laboratory has named four Maria Goeppert Mayer Fellows and one Walter Massey Fellow. Maria Goeppert Mayer was a pioneering nuclear physicist who received the 1963 Nobel Prize in physics for discovering, at Argonne, the shell model of the atomic nucleus. Walter Massey ...
Generation of color-tunable high-performance LG laser beams via Janus OPO
2023-04-24
Laguerre-Gaussian (LG) modes are a type of light wave that can carry the external torque of photons as they move through space. They are useful in many fields, from optical communications to super-resolution imaging. Advanced developments in these and other applications demand reliable and color-tunable LG mode laser sources, which do not yet exist.
An optical parametric oscillator (OPO) is a device that can generate a wavelength-tunable laser beam, so it has been used to realize a color-tunable LG laser source — generally, in one of two ways. One way is to change a regular beam into an LG beam using a phase component ...
Webb reveals early-universe prequel to huge galaxy cluster
2023-04-24
Every giant was once a baby, though you may never have seen them at that stage of their development. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has begun to shed light on formative years in the history of the universe that have thus far been beyond reach: the formation and assembly of galaxies. For the first time, a protocluster of seven galaxies has been confirmed at a distance that astronomers refer to as redshift 7.9, or a mere 650 million years after the big bang. Based on the data collected, astronomers calculated the nascent cluster’s future development, finding that it will likely grow in size and mass to resemble the Coma Cluster, ...
Study: Mountain quail may benefit from high severity wildfire
2023-04-24
Ithaca, NY--Mountain Quail are an under-studied but recreationally-valued management indicator species in California's Sierra Nevada. They are notoriously difficult to study due to their penchant for impenetrable, dense, shrubby habitats, high elevations, and steep slopes. In this study, researchers used 1,636 autonomous recording units across about 22,000 square kilometers to conduct the first ever systematic and comprehensive study of Mountain Quail habitat associations and fire ecology in the Sierra Nevada.
Researchers from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the University of Minnesota, Univesity of Wisconsin-Madison, and the ...
Keeping a tighter rein on blood pressure in adults over 50 is desirable for brain health
2023-04-24
SAN ANTONIO (April 24, 2023) — Intensive blood pressure treatment significantly reduces the risk of adverse cerebrovascular events such as stroke. New research from The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) shows evidence of how the brain benefits from consistently lower blood pressure.
The study, published March 1 in JAMA Network Open, is a follow-up analysis of the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT), a multicenter clinical trial that compared intensive systolic blood pressure control ...