| Literature DB >> 17005052 |
Carol A Colton1, Ryan T Mott, Hayley Sharpe, Qing Xu, William E Van Nostrand, Michael P Vitek.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Microglia are associated with neuritic plaques in Alzheimer disease (AD) and serve as a primary component of the innate immune response in the brain. Neuritic plaques are fibrous deposits composed of the amyloid beta-peptide fragments (Abeta) of the amyloid precursor protein (APP). Numerous studies have shown that the immune cells in the vicinity of amyloid deposits in AD express mRNA and proteins for pro-inflammatory cytokines, leading to the hypothesis that microglia demonstrate classical (Th-1) immune activation in AD. Nonetheless, the complex role of microglial activation has yet to be fully explored since recent studies show that peripheral macrophages enter an "alternative" activation state.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17005052 PMCID: PMC1609108 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-3-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
AD and normal control brain – characteristics.
| 78.3 ± 1.7 (29) | 12 Male | 9.1 ± 1.6 | Stage 1 | 5( | |
| 77.8 ± 1.0 (47) | 23 Male | 6.8 ± 1.4 | Stage 4–5 | 13 ( |
*Number of individuals expressing an APOE4 gene
Primer ID list. All primers were purchased from Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA
| 18s (Eukaryotic 18s rRNA) | ms | Hs99999901_s1 |
| Arg1 (arginase 1, liver) | ms | Mm00475988_m1 |
| Arg2 (arginase2, type II) | ms | Mm00477592_m1 |
| Chi3l3(chitinase 3-like 3, Ym1) | ms | Mm00657889_mH |
| IL1b (Interleukin 1 beta) | ms | Mm00434228_m1 |
| Mrc1 (mannose receptor, C type 1) | ms | Mm00485148_m1 |
| Nos2 (Nitric oxide synthase 2, inducible, macrophage) | ms | Mm00440485_m1 |
| Ptprc (protein tyrosine phosphatase, receptor type, C, CD45) | ms | Mm00448463-m1 |
| Retnla (resistin like alpha, FIZZ1) | ms | Mm00445109_m1 |
| Slc7a2 (solute carrier family 7 (cationic amino acid transporter, y+system), member 2, Cat2) | ms | Mm00432032_m1 |
| Slc7a3 (solute carrier family 7 (cationic amino acid transporter, y+system), member 3, Cat3) | ms | Mm00500256_m1 |
| Tnf (tumor necrosis factor) | ms | Mm00443258_m1 |
| hARG1 (arginase, liver) | hu | Hs00163660_m1 |
| hARG2 (arginase, type II) | hu | Hs00265750_m1 |
| hCHI3L1 (chitinase 3-like 1 (cartilage glycoprotein-39)) | hu | Hs00609691_m1 |
| hCHI3L2 (chitinase 3-like 2) | hu | Hs00187790_m1 |
| hIL1B (interleukin 1, beta) | hu | Hs00174097_m1 |
| hMRC1 (mannose receptor, C type 1) | hu | Hs00267207_m1 |
| hNOS2A (nitric oxide synthase 2A (inducible, hepatocytes)) | hu | Hs00167248_m1 |
| hPTPRC (protein tyrosine phosphatase, receptor type, C, hCD45) | hu | Hs00174541_m1 |
| hSLC7A2 (solute carrier family 7 (cationic amino acid transporter, y+ system), member 2, hCAT2) | hu | Hs00161809_m1 |
| hSLC7A3 (solute carrier family 7 (cationic amino acid transporter, y+ system), member 3, hCAT3) | hu | Hs00364157_m1 |
| hTNF (tumor necrosis factor (TNF superfamily, member 2)) | hu | Hs00174128_m1 |
Figure 1Alternative activation genes are induced by treatment of microglia with IL4 or IL-13. BV2 cells were treated with IL-4 or IL-13 for 24 hrs and the mRNA expression levels for AG1 (Panel A); MRC1 (Panel B); FIZZ and YM1 (Panel C) were determined using quantitative RT-PCR. mRNA levels for each of these genes significantly increased compared to untreated alone. IL-4 or IL-13 treatment failed to induce TNFα (Panel D) or NOS2 (Panel E) mRNA expression. To determine if the alternative activation genes were induced by classical activation agents, cells were treated with IFNγ (panels A-C). In this case, no induction was observed with IFNγ treatment and, with the exception of AG1 (A), treatment of BV2 cells with the combination of IFNγ and IL-4 reduced mRNA expression of each gene studied; Panel F- Primary microglia obtained from neonatal mouse cortex also demonstrated increased mRNA expression for alternative activation genes (AG1; MRC1) on stimulation with IL-4. NOS2 was not increased by IL-4 treatment but was increased with IFNγ treatment. * = p < 0.001 compared to IL-4 treated alone; ** = p < 0.001 compared to IFNγ treated alone; *** = p < 0.001 compared to untreated alone.
Figure 2Alternative activation genes in mouse models of amyloid pathology. The transcripts of activation-related genes were measured in cortical extracts from Tg-2576 (AD model) and Tg-SwDI mice (CAA model) using quantitative RT-PCR. The data are presented as the average (± SEM) fraction of control levels where the appropriate aged-matched wild type littermate mice served as the comparator control. A.Tg-2576 mice- mRNA for TNFα (p < 0.01), AGI (p = 0.05), MRC1 (p < 0.01), and YM1 (p < 0.02) were significantly increased in the Tg-2576 mice brain B. Tg-SwDI mice- Only TNFα mRNA levels were significantly increased (p < 0.05) in Tg-SwDI mouse brain.
Figure 3Alternative activation genes in Alzheimer's disease. mRNA expression was determined for NOS2, TNFα, IL-1β, AGI, MRC1, CHI3L1, CHI3L2, AG2, CD45, CAT 2 and CAT3 in frontal lobe cortical extracts from AD patients and age-matched, cognitively normal controls. The real-time PCR results are expressed as the average (± SEM) fraction of control where age-matched, cognitively normal brain served as the comparator control. The data show significant elevations in mRNA expression levels for AG1 (* = p < 0.04), CHI3L1 (** = p < 0.006), and CHI3L2 (* = p < 0.04). NOS2 and IL-1β mRNA did not change but TNFα mRNA increased significantly (* = p < 0.04) in AD. CAT2 mRNA, which encodes the inducible arginine transporter, also significantly increased (# = p < 0.02) in AD compared to control. AG2, MRC1, CD45 and CAT3 mRNA expression levels were equivalent between the AD and control brains.
Comparison of alternative activation gene profile.
| Increased | Increased | Increased | |
| No Change | No Change | No Change | |
| Increased | No Change | Increased | |
| - | - | Increased | |
| - | - | Increased | |
| Increased | No Change | - | |
| No Change | No Change | - | |
| Increased | No Change | No Change |
* Rodent only- shares homology with CHI3-family
** Rodent only-shares homology with Resistin family