Abstract

Microglial inflammatory activity is thought to be a major contributor to the pathology of neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), and strategies to restrain their behaviour are under active investigation. Classically, anti-inflammatory approaches are aimed at suppressing proinflammatory mediator production, but exploitation of inflammatory resolution, the endogenous process whereby an inflammatory reaction is terminated, has not been fully investigated as a therapeutic approach in AD. In this study, we sought to provide proof-of-principle that the major proresolving actor, formyl peptide receptor 2, Fpr2, could be targeted to reverse microglial activation induced by the AD-associated proinflammatory stimulus, oligomeric β-amyloid (oAβ). The immortalised murine microglial cell line BV2 was employed as a model system to investigate the proresolving effects of the Fpr2 ligand QC1 upon oAβ-induced inflammatory, oxidative, and metabolic behaviour. Cytotoxic behaviour of BV2 cells was assessed through the use of cocultures with retinoic acid-differentiated human SH-SY5Y cells. Stimulation of BV2 cells with oAβ at 100 nM did not induce classical inflammatory marker production but did stimulate production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), an effect that could be reversed by subsequent treatment with the Fpr2 ligand QC1. Further investigation revealed that oAβ-induced ROS production was associated with NADPH oxidase activation and a shift in BV2 cell metabolic phenotype, activating the pentose phosphate pathway and NADPH production, changes that were again reversed by QC1 treatment. Microglial oAβ-stimulated ROS production was sufficient to induce apoptosis of bystander SH-SY5Y cells, an effect that could be prevented by QC1 treatment. In this study, we provide proof-of-concept data that indicate exploitation of the proresolving receptor Fpr2 can reverse damaging oAβ-induced microglial activation. Future strategies that are aimed at restraining neuroinflammation in conditions such as AD should examine proresolving actors as a mechanism to harness the brain's endogenous healing pathways and limit neuroinflammatory damage.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the single greatest cause of dementia, affecting approximately 4% of individuals aged over 65 years and with a global disease burden of around 37 million individuals [1]

  • We sought to determine the potential of Urine formyl peptide receptors 2/3 GSH (Fpr2/3) as a target to control Aβ-driven inflammation earlier in the disease process when oligomeric Aβ is found in the nanomolar range [30], we characterised the inflammatory response of BV2 cells to AD-relevant concentrations of Aβ

  • As we have previously shown that BV2 cells express murine Fpr2/3 [29], we investigated whether activation of this receptor could reverse oligomeric Aβ (oAβ)-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production

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Summary

Introduction

AD is the single greatest cause of dementia, affecting approximately 4% of individuals aged over 65 years and with a global disease burden of around 37 million individuals [1]. This figure is set to increase as the population ages and is expected to reach around 78 million people by 2050 [2]. Several lines of evidence indicate a pathological role for microglial activity: studies of genetic risk factors for idiopathic AD have identified numerous immune-related risk loci, clinical imaging studies have indicated a positive correlation between microglial activity and both Aβ load and neurodegeneration [5], and chronic neuroinflammation is considered a feature of multiple independent animal models. Aβ can act as a damageassociated molecular pattern [7], stimulating microglial activation through a range of different receptors, including the receptor for advanced glycation end products, toll-like receptors, and CD36 [8]

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