Abstract

BackgroundAlzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevalent form of age-related dementia, and its effect on society increases exponentially as the population ages. Accumulating evidence suggests that neuroinflammation, mediated by the brain’s innate immune system, contributes to AD neuropathology and exacerbates the course of the disease. However, there is no experimental evidence for a causal link between systemic inflammation or neuroinflammation and the onset of the disease.MethodsThe viral mimic, polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidilic acid (PolyI:C) was used to stimulate the immune system of experimental animals. Wild-type (WT) and transgenic mice were exposed to this cytokine inducer prenatally (gestation day (GD)17) and/or in adulthood. Behavioral, immunological, immunohistochemical, and biochemical analyses of AD-associated neuropathologic changes were performed during aging.ResultsWe found that a systemic immune challenge during late gestation predisposes WT mice to develop AD-like neuropathology during the course of aging. They display chronic elevation of inflammatory cytokines, an increase in the levels of hippocampal amyloid precursor protein (APP) and its proteolytic fragments, altered Tau phosphorylation, and mis-sorting to somatodendritic compartments, and significant impairments in working memory in old age. If this prenatal infection is followed by a second immune challenge in adulthood, the phenotype is strongly exacerbated, and mimics AD-like neuropathologic changes. These include deposition of APP and its proteolytic fragments, along with Tau aggregation, microglia activation and reactive gliosis. Whereas Aβ peptides were not significantly enriched in extracellular deposits of double immune-challenged WT mice at 15 months, they dramatically increased in age-matched immune-challenged transgenic AD mice, precisely around the inflammation-induced accumulations of APP and its proteolytic fragments, in striking similarity to the post-mortem findings in human patients with AD.ConclusionChronic inflammatory conditions induce age-associated development of an AD-like phenotype in WT mice, including the induction of APP accumulations, which represent a seed for deposition of aggregation-prone peptides. The PolyI:C mouse model therefore provides a unique tool to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the earliest pathophysiological changes preceding fibrillary Aβ plaque deposition and neurofibrillary tangle formations in a physiological context of aging. Based on the similarity between the changes in immune-challenged mice and the development of AD in humans, we suggest that systemic infections represent a major risk factor for the development of AD.

Highlights

  • Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevalent form of age-related dementia, and its effect on society increases exponentially as the population ages

  • To elucidate the role of inflammatory processes in the etiology of AD-like pathology in mice, we challenged non-transgenic mouse dams with polyribocytidilic acid (PolyI):C at GD17, and analyzed the development and progression of AD-like neuropathology in the offspring during adulthood and aging

  • In line with the finding that a long-term peripheral infusion of IL-1β induces hippocampal cytokine mRNA expression [31], we found increased levels of other cytokines, such as IL-1α and IL-6, in the hippocampus of 15 month-old mice exposed to PolyI:C compared with saline controls (Figure 1A; see Additional file 1: Figure S1A-C)

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Summary

Introduction

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most prevalent form of age-related dementia, and its effect on society increases exponentially as the population ages. Today we know that specific markers of neuroinflammation are selectively enriched in brain areas affected by Alzheimer’s disease (AD) neuropathology [1], and that individuals with high plaque burden without dementia show virtually no evidence of neuroinflammation [2] This is further supported by positron emission tomography (PET) imaging studies, which have shown that cognitive status is inversely correlated with microglial activation in patients with AD [3]. In vivo experimental evidence to support an early and potentially causative role for systemic infections and neuroinflammation in the etiology of sporadic AD is still missing

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