Soto Ileana, Graham Leah C, Richter Hannah J, Simeone Stephen N, Radell Jake E, Grabowska Weronika, Funkhouser W Keith, Howell Megan C, Howell Gareth R
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine, United States of America.
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine, United States of America; Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, Tufts University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2015 Oct 29;13(10):e1002279. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002279. eCollection 2015 Oct.
Aging is the major risk factor for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, but little is known about the processes that lead to age-related decline of brain structures and function. Here we use RNA-seq in combination with high resolution histological analyses to show that aging leads to a significant deterioration of neurovascular structures including basement membrane reduction, pericyte loss, and astrocyte dysfunction. Neurovascular decline was sufficient to cause vascular leakage and correlated strongly with an increase in neuroinflammation including up-regulation of complement component C1QA in microglia/monocytes. Importantly, long-term aerobic exercise from midlife to old age prevented this age-related neurovascular decline, reduced C1QA+ microglia/monocytes, and increased synaptic plasticity and overall behavioral capabilities of aged mice. Concomitant with age-related neurovascular decline and complement activation, astrocytic Apoe dramatically decreased in aged mice, a decrease that was prevented by exercise. Given the role of APOE in maintaining the neurovascular unit and as an anti-inflammatory molecule, this suggests a possible link between astrocytic Apoe, age-related neurovascular dysfunction and microglia/monocyte activation. To test this, Apoe-deficient mice were exercised from midlife to old age and in contrast to wild-type (Apoe-sufficient) mice, exercise had little to no effect on age-related neurovascular decline or microglia/monocyte activation in the absence of APOE. Collectively, our data shows that neurovascular structures decline with age, a process that we propose to be intimately linked to complement activation in microglia/monocytes. Exercise prevents these changes, but not in the absence of APOE, opening up new avenues for understanding the complex interactions between neurovascular and neuroinflammatory responses in aging and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease.
衰老为阿尔茨海默病等神经退行性疾病的主要风险因素,但导致与年龄相关的脑结构和功能衰退的过程却鲜为人知。在此,我们结合RNA测序与高分辨率组织学分析表明,衰老会导致神经血管结构显著恶化,包括基底膜减少、周细胞丢失和星形胶质细胞功能障碍。神经血管衰退足以导致血管渗漏,并与神经炎症增加密切相关,包括小胶质细胞/单核细胞中补体成分C1QA的上调。重要的是,从中年到老年进行长期有氧运动可预防这种与年龄相关的神经血管衰退,减少C1QA+小胶质细胞/单核细胞,并增强老年小鼠的突触可塑性和整体行为能力。与年龄相关的神经血管衰退和补体激活相伴,老年小鼠星形胶质细胞载脂蛋白E显著减少,而运动可预防这种减少。鉴于APOE在维持神经血管单元以及作为抗炎分子方面的作用,这表明星形胶质细胞载脂蛋白E、与年龄相关的神经血管功能障碍和小胶质细胞/单核细胞激活之间可能存在联系。为了验证这一点,将载脂蛋白E基因敲除小鼠从中年到老年进行运动,与野生型(载脂蛋白E充足)小鼠相比,在缺乏APOE的情况下,运动对与年龄相关的神经血管衰退或小胶质细胞/单核细胞激活几乎没有影响。总体而言,我们的数据表明神经血管结构随年龄衰退,我们认为这一过程与小胶质细胞/单核细胞中的补体激活密切相关。运动可预防这些变化,但在缺乏APOE时则不然,这为理解衰老及阿尔茨海默病等神经退行性疾病中神经血管和神经炎症反应之间的复杂相互作用开辟了新途径。