Abstract:
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is an age-related neurodegenerative disorder and the most common
form of dementia. Thereby, the abnormal deposition of the amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide into plaques
is considered to be the primary neuropathological insult in AD. For a small proportion of all
AD cases it is well known that rare genetic mutations are causative for very early Aβ deposition
(familial Alzheimer’s disease). However, the vast majority of all AD cases manifest at later
ages (late-onset Alzheimer’s disease (LOAD)) and are most likely caused by an interplay of
multiple genetic variants and the environment.
During the last ten years, genome-wide association studies revealed several risk loci
that increase the susceptibility for LOAD, and interestingly, many of these genetic variants
were found to be associated with innate immune functions of which the resident tissue
macrophages of the brain – the microglia – are prime regulators.
In general, the innate immune response mediated by the resident tissue macrophages is
considered protective as it induces the production of inflammatory modulators and enables
phagocytosis and killing of pathogens to prevent further tissue damage. However in the AD
brain, the progressive accumulation of Aβ deposits leads to a chronic exposure of microglia to
Aβ aggregates and induces an excessive neuro-inflammatory response that is thought to
promote disease progression.
Interestingly, microglia display a highly plastic phenotype and studies from peripheral
tissue macrophages reported that a variety of environmental stimuli can determine but also
reprogram their functional phenotype. To this end, this thesis summarizes three different
approaches, which aimed to understand but also modulate the myeloid cell immune function
during AD with regard to their effects on the pathology of cerebral β-amyloidosis.
To begin with, we examined whether peripheral monocytes, which were previously
shown to adopt a microglia-like phenotype in the healthy brain, can replace dysfunctional
microglia in brains of two different mouse models of cerebral β-amyloidosis and may then
restrict Aβ accumulation. For this purpose, we depleted microglia in APPPS1 and APP23
transgenic (tg) mice that expressed the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSVTK) under
the myeloid-cell specific CD11b promoter; the application of the thymidine kinase substrate
ganciclovir (GCV), which is converted into a cytotoxic product, then induced microglial death.
After a two-week ganciclovir treatment, application was discontinued from two weeks up to six
months to allow the peripheral monocytes to repopulate the brain. Interestingly, during the first
weeks of repopulation the number of infiltrated monocytes were twice the number of resident
microglia in control mice, but the engrafted monocytes failed to cluster around Aβ plaques. Consequently, we did not observe alterations in plaque pathology. Also, a pro-longed
incubation for up to six months did not change Aβ load. However, long-term monocyte
engraftment for five months induced in pre-depositing APP23 mice enabled the infiltrated
monocytes to behave most similar to resident microglia: they began clustering around Aβ
depositions, the cell number was virtually equal to control mice and plaque-associated
monocytes were TREM2-positive. However, these cells also failed to alter Aβ plaque load.
This work indicates that the tissue environment in the brain dominates over myeloid cell
origin and thus reprograms myeloid cells to match the resident microglia population, however
without prevention of Aβ pathology.
Recent studies provide evidence that cells of the innate immune system can, similar to
the adaptive immune cells, acquire immunological memory. In particular, a distinct set of
primary immune stimuli can either enhance or suppress a subsequent immune response, which
is referred to as “training” and “tolerance”, respectively. In a second study, we tested the
applicability of the immune memory concept to microglia and examined if the induction of
innate immune memory can induce long-lasting changes in the brain’s immune response and
thereby alter pathology of neurological diseases. To this end, we injected two different doses
of the endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into pre-depositing APP23 mice. Whereas a single
LPS injection was identified to induce acute training effects, consecutive injections for four
days induced tolerance effects in microglia. Accordingly, in the brain, we acutely measured
initially enhanced concentrations of inflammatory cytokines which decreased with further LPS
injections.
When we examined the long-lasting effects of the induced immune memory on Aβ
pathology and cortical ischemia at the later time points, the initial training stimulus increased
while the tolerance stimulus reduced pathology, which was reflected by changes in Aβ plaque
load and neuronal damage, respectively.
Immune memory in macrophages was previously shown to be mediated by epigenetic
changes in enhancer regions that either stimulate or prevent gene transcription. In accordance,
we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing for histone modifications in isolated
microglia to determine changes in their enhancer landscape. Notably, we identified the active
enhancer repertoire for hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α), a key modulator for macrophage
inflammatory responses, to be enriched in microglia after the induction of trained immune
memory (1xLPS). In contrast, pathways related to phagocytic functions showed an increase in
active enhancers in the 4xLPS treatment group. Importantly, these epigenetic alterations were
reflected by expression changes in the respective genes in the isolated microglia population. By this study, we provide first evidence for long-lasting innate immune memory in the brain that
can shape neurological disease outcome and is driven by epigenetic modifications of the
microglial enhancer landscape.
In a last study, we focused on the microglial phagocytic capacity as an important factor
for the modulation of Aβ plaque pathology, as in vitro experiments have reported that microglia
can bind to, and engulf Aβ fibrils. However, so far, in vivo studies have not convincingly
confirmed these results. Therefore, we investigated the role of the soluble milk fat globuleepidermal growth-factor 8 (MFG-E8) protein, that was recently hypothesized to mediate Aβ
phagocytosis in AD pathology. To test the in vivo function of MFG-E8, we crossed mice
expressing a functional knockout variant of Mfge8 (Mfge8-/-) with the APPPS1 and APP23 tg
mouse models of cerebral β-amyloidosis.
In contrast to previous reports, our results indicated that the depletion of MFG-E8 has
no impact on Aβ uptake by microglia or subsequent Aβ degradation processes. However,
contrary to our expectations, MFG-E8 deficiency reduced Aβ plaque load and Aβ levels in both
mouse models without affecting amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing.
When we immunohistochemically analyzed MFG-E8 distribution in the brain we
observed a strong accumulation of MFG-E8 with congophilic Aβ deposits and co-staining of
MFG-E8 with Aβ even showed a partial co-localization of both proteins at the sites of Aβ
plaques. While the mechanism of these effects requires further studies, our results suggests that
a direct interaction between MFG-E8 and Aβ promotes amyloid aggregation.
Taken together, these studies examined different ways of modulating the microglial
immune response during AD pathology. Interestingly, the replacement of dysfunctional
microglia by peripheral monocytes in the diseased brain did not modify Aβ deposition although
the infiltrated monocytes adopted features of plaque-associated microglia. However, when we
applied the concept of innate immune memory to the brain through the remodeling of the innate
immune response by epigenetic reprogramming of the microglial enhancer repertoire, we
identified a promising approach to modify Aβ pathology. Especially the induction of a
microglial tolerance state had beneficial long-term effects on the pathology of cerebral β-
amyloidosis while training aggravated disease outcome. These results provide, for the first time,
evidence that long-lasting modulation of the innate immune reaction may occur due to
immunological priming – a mechanism that introduces new targets for dampening Aβ
pathology in Alzheimer’s disease.
However, in contrast, a direct modification of microglial Aβ phagocytosis through the
knockout of Mfge8 is most likely not sufficient to modulate microglia function in AD.