Pitt Jason, Wilcox Kyle C, Tortelli Vanessa, Diniz Luan Pereira, Oliveira Maira S, Dobbins Cassandra, Yu Xiao-Wen, Nandamuri Sathwik, Gomes Flávia C A, DiNunno Nadia, Viola Kirsten L, De Felice Fernanda G, Ferreira Sergio T, Klein William L
Department of Neurobiology, Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208.
Department of Physiology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611.
Mol Biol Cell. 2017 Oct 1;28(20):2623-2636. doi: 10.1091/mbc.E17-06-0416. Epub 2017 Aug 9.
Synaptopathy underlying memory deficits in Alzheimer's disease (AD) is increasingly thought to be instigated by toxic oligomers of the amyloid beta peptide (AβOs). Given the long latency and incomplete penetrance of AD dementia with respect to Aβ pathology, we hypothesized that factors present in the CNS may physiologically protect neurons from the deleterious impact of AβOs. Here we employed physically separated neuron-astrocyte cocultures to investigate potential non-cell autonomous neuroprotective factors influencing AβO toxicity. Neurons cultivated in the absence of an astrocyte feeder layer showed abundant AβO binding to dendritic processes and associated synapse deterioration. In contrast, neurons in the presence of astrocytes showed markedly reduced AβO binding and synaptopathy. Results identified the protective factors released by astrocytes as insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF1). The protective mechanism involved release of newly bound AβOs into the extracellular medium dependent upon trafficking that was sensitive to exosome pathway inhibitors. Delaying insulin treatment led to AβO binding that was no longer releasable. The neuroprotective potential of astrocytes was itself sensitive to chronic AβO exposure, which reduced insulin/IGF1 expression. Our findings support the idea that physiological protection against synaptotoxic AβOs can be mediated by astrocyte-derived insulin/IGF1, but that this protection itself is vulnerable to AβO buildup.
越来越多的研究认为,阿尔茨海默病(AD)中导致记忆缺陷的突触病变是由淀粉样β肽(AβOs)的毒性寡聚体引发的。鉴于AD痴呆在Aβ病理学方面存在较长的潜伏期和不完全的外显率,我们推测中枢神经系统中存在的因素可能在生理上保护神经元免受AβOs的有害影响。在这里,我们采用物理分离的神经元-星形胶质细胞共培养来研究影响AβO毒性的潜在非细胞自主性神经保护因子。在没有星形胶质细胞饲养层的情况下培养的神经元显示出大量AβO与树突状突起结合以及相关的突触退化。相比之下,存在星形胶质细胞时的神经元显示AβO结合和突触病变明显减少。结果确定星形胶质细胞释放的保护因子为胰岛素和胰岛素样生长因子-1(IGF1)。保护机制涉及将新结合的AβOs释放到细胞外介质中,这依赖于对细胞外囊泡途径抑制剂敏感的运输过程。延迟胰岛素治疗会导致不再可释放的AβO结合。星形胶质细胞的神经保护潜力本身对慢性AβO暴露敏感,这会降低胰岛素/IGF1的表达。我们的研究结果支持这样一种观点,即星形胶质细胞衍生的胰岛素/IGF1可以介导对突触毒性AβOs的生理保护,但这种保护本身容易受到AβO积累的影响。