Abstract

Neuroinflammation and the tissue-resident innate immune cells, the microglia, respond and contribute to neurodegenerative pathology. Although microglia have been the focus of work linking neuroinflammation and associated dementias like Alzheimer’s Disease, the inflammatory milieu of brain is a conglomerate of cross-talk amongst microglia, systemic immune cells and soluble mediators like cytokines. Age-related changes in the inflammatory profile at the levels of both the brain and periphery are largely orchestrated by immune system cells. Strong evidence indicates that both innate and adaptive immune cells, the latter including T cells and B cells, contribute to chronic neuroinflammation and thus dementia. Neurodegenerative hallmarks coupled with more traditional immune system stimuli like infection or injury likely combine to trigger and maintain persistent microglial and thus brain inflammation. This review summarizes age-related changes in immune cell function, with special emphasis on lymphocytes as a source of inflammation, and discusses how such changes may potentiate both systemic and central nervous system inflammation to culminate in dementia. We recap the understudied area of AD-associated changes in systemic lymphocytes in greater detail to provide a unifying perspective of inflammation-fueled dementia, with an eye toward evidence of two-way communication between the brain parenchyma and blood immune cells. We focused our review on human subjects studies, adding key data from animal models as relevant.

Highlights

  • Dementia is a disease of the mind, but the whole body contributes to brain demise

  • While the involvement of blood-derived immune cells in central nervous system (CNS) tissue is limited in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and related dementias, it is well-known that a systemic immune response affects the brain

  • The changes include a decrease in CD8 cells in probable AD dementia and an increase in CD8 cells in probable vascular dementia (VaD) both compared to age-matched controls (Pirttila et al, 1992; Hu et al, 1995; Shalit et al, 1995)

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia is a disease of the mind, but the whole body contributes to brain demise. The corollary is likely true: the degeneration of the brain likely contributes to the demise of the body. While the involvement of blood-derived immune cells in CNS tissue is limited in AD and related dementias, it is well-known that a systemic immune response affects the brain. This review evaluates the evidence for changes in the systemic immune system with age and dementia.

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