Department of Biomedical Sciences, Regenerative Medicine Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, 8700 Beverly Blvd., Steven Spielberg Building, Room 361, Los Angeles, CA 90048, USA.
J Neural Transm (Vienna). 2010 Aug;117(8):961-70. doi: 10.1007/s00702-010-0422-7. Epub 2010 Jun 2.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive and incurable neurodegenerative disorder clinically characterized by cognitive decline involving loss of memory, reasoning and linguistic ability. The amyloid cascade hypothesis holds that mismetabolism and aggregation of neurotoxic amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides, which are deposited as amyloid plaques, are the central etiological events in AD. Recent evidence from AD mouse models suggests that blood-borne mononuclear phagocytes are capable of infiltrating the brain and restricting beta-amyloid plaques, thereby limiting disease progression. These observations raise at least three key questions: (1) what is the cell of origin for macrophages in the AD brain, (2) do blood-borne macrophages impact the pathophysiology of AD and (3) could these enigmatic cells be therapeutically targeted to curb cerebral amyloidosis and thereby slow disease progression? This review begins with a historical perspective of peripheral mononuclear phagocytes in AD, and moves on to critically consider the controversy surrounding their identity as distinct from brain-resident microglia and their potential impact on AD pathology.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种进行性且无法治愈的神经退行性疾病,临床上以认知能力下降为特征,包括记忆力、推理和语言能力的丧失。淀粉样蛋白级联假说认为,神经毒性淀粉样β(Abeta)肽的代谢紊乱和聚集,这些肽被沉积为淀粉样斑块,是 AD 的中心病因事件。来自 AD 小鼠模型的最新证据表明,血液来源的单核吞噬细胞能够渗透到大脑中并限制β-淀粉样斑块,从而限制疾病的进展。这些观察结果提出了至少三个关键问题:(1)AD 大脑中巨噬细胞的细胞起源是什么,(2)血液来源的巨噬细胞是否影响 AD 的病理生理学,以及(3)这些神秘的细胞能否被治疗性靶向以抑制脑淀粉样变性从而减缓疾病进展?本综述首先从 AD 外周单核吞噬细胞的历史角度进行了阐述,然后批判性地考虑了它们作为不同于脑驻留小胶质细胞的独特身份的争议,以及它们对 AD 病理学的潜在影响。