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CD40 signaling regulates innate and adaptive activation of microglia in response to amyloid beta-peptide
Authors:Townsend Kirk P  Town Terrence  Mori Takashi  Lue Lih-Fen  Shytle Doug  Sanberg Paul R  Morgan David  Fernandez Francisco  Flavell Richard A  Tan Jun
Institution:Neuroimmunology Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, USA.
Abstract:Although deposition of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) as Abeta plaques involves activation of microglia-mediated inflammatory responses, activated microglia ultimately fail to clear Abeta plaques in the brains of either Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients or AD mouse models. Mounting evidence suggests that chronic microglia-mediated immune response during Abeta deposition etiologically contributes to AD pathogenesis by promoting Abeta plaque formation. However, the mechanisms that govern microglia response in the context of cerebral Abeta/beta-amyloid pathology are not well understood. We show that ligation of CD40 by CD40L modulates Abeta-induced innate immune responses in microglia, including decreased microglia phagocytosis of exogenous Abeta(1-42) and increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. CD40 ligation in the presence of Abeta(1-42) leads to adaptive activation of microglia, as evidenced by increased co-localization of MHC class II with Abeta. To assess their antigen-presenting cell (APC) function, cultured microglia were pulsed with Abeta(1-42) in the presence of CD40L and co-cultured with CD4(+) T cells. Under these conditions, microglia stimulate T cell-derived IFN-gamma and IL-2 production, suggesting that CD40 signaling promotes the APC phenotype. These data provide a mechanistic explanation for our previous work showing decreased microgliosis associated with diminished cerebral Abeta/beta-amyloid pathology when blocking CD40 signaling in transgenic Alzheimer's mice.
Keywords:CD40  Microglia  Phagocytosis  Amyloid β‐peptide  Alzheimer's disease
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