Christensen Amy, Liu Jiahui, Pike Christian J
Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2020 May 5;12:113. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2020.00113. eCollection 2020.
Vulnerability to Alzheimer's disease (AD) is increased by several risk factors, including midlife obesity, female sex, and the depletion of estrogens in women as a consequence of menopause. Conversely, estrogen-based hormone therapies have been linked with protection from age-related increases in adiposity and dementia risk, although treatment efficacy appears to be affected by the age of initiation. Potential interactions between obesity, AD, aging, and estrogen treatment are likely to have significant impact on optimizing the use of hormone therapies in postmenopausal women. In the current study, we compared how treatment with the primary estrogen, 17β-estradiol (E2), affects levels of AD-like neuropathology, behavioral impairment, and other neural and systemic effects of preexisting diet-induced obesity in female 3xTg-AD mice. Importantly, experiments were conducted at chronological ages associated with both the early and late stages of reproductive senescence. We observed that E2 treatment was generally associated with significantly improved metabolic outcomes, including reductions in body weight, adiposity, and leptin, across both age groups. Conversely, neural benefits of E2 in obese mice, including decreased β-amyloid burden, improved behavioral performance, and reduced microglial activation, were observed only in the early aging group. These results are consistent with the perspective that neural benefits of estrogen-based therapies require initiation of treatment during early rather than later phases of reproductive aging. Further, the discordance between E2 protection against systemic versus neural effects of obesity across age groups suggests that pathways other than general metabolic function, perhaps including reduced microglial activation, contribute to the mechanism(s) of the observed E2 actions. These findings reinforce the potential systemic and neural benefits of estrogen therapies against obesity, while also highlighting the critical role of aging as a mediator of estrogens' protective actions.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)的易感性会因多种风险因素而增加,包括中年肥胖、女性性别以及女性绝经后雌激素的减少。相反,基于雌激素的激素疗法与预防与年龄相关的肥胖增加和痴呆风险有关,尽管治疗效果似乎受开始治疗时的年龄影响。肥胖、AD、衰老和雌激素治疗之间的潜在相互作用可能对优化绝经后女性激素疗法的使用产生重大影响。在本研究中,我们比较了主要雌激素17β-雌二醇(E2)治疗如何影响雌性3xTg-AD小鼠中与饮食诱导的肥胖相关的AD样神经病理学水平、行为损伤以及其他神经和全身效应。重要的是,实验是在与生殖衰老早期和晚期相关的实际年龄进行的。我们观察到,E2治疗通常与两个年龄组的代谢结果显著改善相关,包括体重、肥胖和瘦素的降低。相反,仅在早期衰老组中观察到E2对肥胖小鼠的神经益处,包括β-淀粉样蛋白负担减轻、行为表现改善和小胶质细胞活化减少。这些结果与基于雌激素的疗法的神经益处需要在生殖衰老的早期而非晚期开始治疗的观点一致。此外,E2在不同年龄组中对肥胖的全身效应和神经效应的保护作用不一致,这表明除了一般代谢功能之外的途径,可能包括减少小胶质细胞活化,有助于观察到的E2作用机制。这些发现强化了雌激素疗法对肥胖的潜在全身和神经益处,同时也突出了衰老作为雌激素保护作用介导因素的关键作用。