| Literature DB >> 25972808 |
Joseph O Ojo1, Payam Rezaie2, Paul L Gabbott2, Michael G Stewart2.
Abstract
Aging is one of the greatest risk factors for the development of sporadic age-related neurodegenerative diseases and neuroinflammation is a common feature of this disease phenotype. In the immunoprivileged brain, neuroglial cells, which mediate neuroinflammatory responses, are influenced by the physiological factors in the microenvironment of the central nervous system (CNS). These physiological factors include but are not limited to cell-to-cell communication involving cell adhesion molecules, neuronal electrical activity and neurotransmitter and neuromodulator action. However, despite this dynamic control of neuroglial activity, in the healthy aged brain there is an alteration in the underlying neuroinflammatory response notably seen in the hippocampus, typified by astrocyte/microglia activation and increased pro-inflammatory cytokine production and signaling. These changes may occur without any overt concurrent pathology, however, they typically correlate with deteriorations in hippocamapal or cognitive function. In this review we examine two important phenomenons, firstly the relationship between age-related brain deterioration (focusing on hippocampal function) and underlying neuroglial response(s), and secondly how the latter affects molecular and cellular processes within the hippocampus that makes it vulnerable to age-related cognitive decline.Entities:
Keywords: aging; astrocytes; cognition; hippocampus; microglia; neuroinflammation
Year: 2015 PMID: 25972808 PMCID: PMC4413780 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2015.00057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1Morphological changes to astroglial and microglial cells in the aged hippocampus. Robust activation of microglial cells typified by an increase in cell density and expression of cell surface markers, such as, major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII) is evident in the aged hippocampus of rodents (A,B). This is notable in the CA3 and dentate gyrus regions of the hippocampus involved in learning and memory (A). These microglial cells show intense electron dense staining for phagolysosomes following electron microscopic examination (C). Astroglial cells in aged hippocampus become hypertrophic and increase their expression of glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP), a marker of astrogliosis (D,E). These cells demonstrate an enlarged cell body and reduced cellular processes (F,G). Scale bar in (D) represents 733 μm in (A,D); 65 μm in (B,E); and 7.25 μm in (F,G). Scale bar in (C) represents 1.25 μm.
Figure 2Summary of age-related neuroglial response(s) in the brain (hippocampus). The hippocampus is involved in the retrieval and consolidation of memory, and with advanced aging hippocampal function progressively deteriorates. These changes correlate with underlying hallmark neuroglial cell response, typified by the activation of microglial and astroglial cells, robust morphological changes, and an increase in phenotypic expression of antigen activation markers (MHCII, CD68, CD45, GFAP). In addition, activated neuroglial cells in aging also display increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and their signaling profiles, phagocytic/lysosomal activity, toxic oxidative-lipid products and a reduction in the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines and neurotrophic factors. In microglial cells, these changes are thought to contribute to their priming (and possible senescence), reducing their threshold of tolerability and therefore shifting the balance to increased age-related neuroinflammation and hence neurotoxicity. Astroglial cells, which are essential in metabolic support of neurons and vascular cells, progressively relinquish these supportive roles leading to deterioration in brain function. Together this culminates in subtle impairments in dendritic integrity, synaptic function, neurogenesis, increased oxidative metabolism, diminished protein clearance, and microvascular deterioration. Abbreviation: (ROS) reactive oxygen species such as nitric oxide, superoxide.