| Literature DB >> 23493481 |
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and age-related macular degeneration (AMD), share two characteristics in common: (1) a disease prevalence that increases markedly with advancing age, and (2) neuroinflammatory changes in which microglia, the primary resident immune cell of the CNS, feature prominently. These characteristics have led to the hypothesis that pathogenic mechanisms underlying age-related neurodegenerative disease involve aging changes in microglia. If correct, targeting features of microglial senescence may constitute a feasible therapeutic strategy. This review explores this hypothesis and its implications by considering the current knowledge on how microglia undergo change during aging and how the emergence of these aging phenotypes relate to significant alterations in microglial function. Evidence and theories on cellular mechanisms implicated in driving senescence in microglia are reviewed, as are "rejuvenative" measures and strategies that aim to reverse or ameliorate the aging microglial phenotype. Understanding and controlling microglial aging may represent an opportunity for elucidating disease mechanisms and for formulating novel therapies.Entities:
Keywords: activation; aging; inflammation; microglia; neurodegeneration; priming; rejuvenation; senescence
Year: 2013 PMID: 23493481 PMCID: PMC3595516 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2013.00022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Summary of changes in microglial distribution, morphology, and behavior associated with aging.
| Increase in microglial numbers/density in neural parenchyma |
| Decrease in regularity in distribution |
| Translocation into areas not previously occupied by microglia (e.g., to the outer layers of the retina) |
| Decrease in individual microglial ramification (dendritic arbor area, branching, and total process length) |
| Appearance of morphological changes suggestive of increased activation state (e.g., perinuclear cytoplasmic hypertrophy, retraction of processes) |
| Sporadic appearance of dystrophic microglia in aged human brains |
| Decrease in rate of process movement |
| Decrease in rate of migration to focal tissue injury |
Summary of proposed drivers of microglial senescence.
| Shortening of telomeres | Induction of replicative senescence and decreased ability to proliferate |
| Accumulation of intracellular lipofuscin | Decreased autophagy, leading to decreased organelle (e.g., mitochondria) turnover, increased ROS production, increased microglial activation |
| Accumulation of mtDNA mutations | Dysfunction in respiratory chain and over-production of ROS, leading to increased microglial activation |
| Increased iron load | Increased intracellular iron leads to increased ROS production and microglial activation |
Proposed therapeutic approaches for the rejuvenation of senescent microglia.
| Minocycline | Inhibits microglial activation, decreases microglial proinflammatory cytokine production |
| IL1RA | Inhibits IL1β-mediated proinflammatory signaling |
| Dietary supplementation with antioxidants: flavonoids (e.g., luteolin, quercetin, genistein, hesperetin), retinoids/carotenoids (e.g., astaxanthin, crocin, crocetin, retinoic acid, lutein, zeaxanthin), vitamins (E and D3) | Exerts antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, decreases markers of neuroinflammation |
| Decreasing lipofuscin accumulation with visual cycle modulators (ACU-4429, fenretinide) | Partially inhibits the visual cycle to decrease ocular lipofuscin formation in retinal microglia |
| Stimulation of microglial autophagy (e.g., anti-lipolytic drugs, rapamycin) | Increases autophagy to promote mitochondria turnover in microglia |
| Stimulation of TFAM expression or activity (e.g., resveratrol, brimonidine) | Inhibits accumulation of mtDNA mutations in microglial mitochondria, decreasing ROS production |
| Stimulation of CX3CL1-CX3CR1 signaling | Decreases microglial activation states |
| Stimulation of CD200-CD200R signaling [stimulation of IL4 signaling, fibroblast growth loop (FGL)] | Decreases microglial activation states |
| Exercise | Decreases microglial activation states, up-regulates proliferation of neural precursor cells |
| Depletion, followed by autologous or exogenous repletion by bone marrow derived cells | Enables the replacement of endogenous aged microglia with “replacement” immune cells that can carry out microglial functions |
| Cell-based therapies involving stem cells | Enables the replacement of endogenous aged microglia with “replacement” immune cells that can carry out microglial functions |