| Literature DB >> 29311817 |
Rodrigo E González-Reyes1, Mauricio O Nava-Mesa1, Karina Vargas-Sánchez2, Daniel Ariza-Salamanca1, Laura Mora-Muñoz1.
Abstract
Alzheimer disease (AD) is a frequent and devastating neurodegenerative disease in humans, but still no curative treatment has been developed. Although many explicative theories have been proposed, precise pathophysiological mechanisms are unknown. Due to the importance of astrocytes in brain homeostasis they have become interesting targets for the study of AD. Changes in astrocyte function have been observed in brains from individuals with AD, as well as in AD in vitro and in vivo animal models. The presence of amyloid beta (Aβ) has been shown to disrupt gliotransmission, neurotransmitter uptake, and alter calcium signaling in astrocytes. Furthermore, astrocytes express apolipoprotein E and are involved in the production, degradation and removal of Aβ. As well, changes in astrocytes that precede other pathological characteristics observed in AD, point to an early contribution of astroglia in this disease. Astrocytes participate in the inflammatory/immune responses of the central nervous system. The presence of Aβ activates different cell receptors and intracellular signaling pathways, mainly the advanced glycation end products receptor/nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) pathway, responsible for the transcription of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in astrocytes. The release of these pro-inflammatory agents may induce cellular damage or even stimulate the production of Aβ in astrocytes. Additionally, Aβ induces the appearance of oxidative stress (OS) and production of reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species in astrocytes, affecting among others, intracellular calcium levels, NADPH oxidase (NOX), NF-κB signaling, glutamate uptake (increasing the risk of excitotoxicity) and mitochondrial function. Excessive neuroinflammation and OS are observed in AD, and astrocytes seem to be involved in both. The Aβ/NF-κB interaction in astrocytes may play a central role in these inflammatory and OS changes present in AD. In this paper, we also discuss therapeutic measures highlighting the importance of astrocytes in AD pathology. Several new therapeutic approaches involving phenols (curcumin), phytoestrogens (genistein), neuroesteroids and other natural phytochemicals have been explored in astrocytes, obtaining some promising results regarding cognitive improvements and attenuation of neuroinflammation. Novel strategies comprising astrocytes and aimed to reduce OS in AD have also been proposed. These include estrogen receptor agonists (pelargonidin), Bambusae concretio Salicea, Monascin, and various antioxidatives such as resveratrol, tocotrienol, anthocyanins, and epicatechin, showing beneficial effects in AD models.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; NF-κB pathway; astrocytes; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation; oxidative stress
Year: 2017 PMID: 29311817 PMCID: PMC5742194 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00427
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Summary of studies reporting effects of Aβ or AD on pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in astrocytes.
| Experimental model | Pro-inflammatory agents | Anti-inflammatory agents | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary culture of rat astrocytes treated with Aβ1-42 | ↑TNFα; ↑IL-1β; ↑IL-6; ↑COX-2; ↑PGE2; ↑IL-17; ↑INF-γ; ↑IP-10 | ↑IL-13 | |
| Isolated rat astrocytes treated with Aβ25-35 | ↑TNFα; ↑IL-1β | ||
| Primary cultures of rat astrocytes treated with Aβ1-40 | ↑IL-1β; ↑IL-6 | ||
| Mixed cultures of rat neurons and astrocytes treated with Aβ1-42 and Aβ25-35 | ↑TNFα | ||
| Primary cultures of rat astrocytes treated with spherical aggregates of synthetic Aβ | ↑IL-1β | ||
| ↑IL-1β; ↑TNFα; ↑COX-2 | |||
| Primary culture of mice astrocytes treated with Aβ1-42 | ↑IL-1β; ↑IL-6; ↑TNFα | ↓TGF-β1 | |
| Brain sections of Tg2576 mice stained for GFAP | ↑IL-1β; ↑IL-6; ↑INF-γ; ↑IL-12 | ↑TGF- β1; ↑IL-10 | |
| ↓TGF-β1 | |||
| ↑IP-10; ↑GM-CSF | ↑IL-13 | ||
| Astrocytoma human cell line U-373 MG treated with Aβ1-40 (co-treated with IL-1β) | ↑IL-6 | ||
| Postmortem brain tissue from patients with AD, stained for GFAP (or other astrocytic marker) | ↑IL-1β; ↑IL-6; ↑IL-18 |
Summary of studies showing astrocytic-induced OS in several models of AD.
| Experimental model | Prooxidative | Antioxidative | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Isolated cortical astrocytes; hippocampal neurons and astrocytes in coculture, and preparations of astrocytes from rat hippocampus (Aβ25-35, Aβ1-42). | ↑NOX; mitochondrial depolarization; ↑ROS | ↓GSH | |
| Primary culture of cortical rat astrocytes (Aβ1-42). | ↑NOX; ↑ROS; mitochondrial depolarization; ↑iNOS | ↓Cu/Zn SOD; =MnSOD | |
| Mixed cultures of rat hippocampal neurons and astrocytes. Isolated cortical astrocytes (Aβ25-35, Aβ1-42). | ↓GSH | ||
| Cultured cortical rat astrocytes (fibrillar, oligomeric, and scrambled Aβ1-42). | ↑iNOS and NO-derived peroxynitrite | ||
| Postmortem brains from AD patients. APP23 transgenic mice. APP induced by electrolytic cortical lesion. | ↑eNOS and iNOS | ||
| AD postmortem brains. nNOS immunocytochemistry in reactive astrocytes. | ↑nNOS | ||
| Primary astrocyte culture derived from C57BL/6 (Aβ1-42) and derived from 5xFAD mice. | Acute ↑GSH after monomeric Aβ. Induction of ABCC1 was reduced in 6-month old 5xFAD mice. | ||
| Intrahippocampal injection of Aβ25-35. GFAP measured by ELISA in rats. | =iNOS | ↓Catalase | |
| Cultured cortical rat astrocytes (Aβ25-35). | ↑NOX | ↓Catalase; ↓SOD, ↓GSH; ↑GST | |
| Isolated rat astrocyte cultures (Aβ25-35). | ↑iNOS; ↑ROS; ↑RNS | ↑MnSOD | |
| Mixed cultures of mice neurons and astrocytes. Isolated mice astrocytes (Aβ25-35; Aβ1-42). | ↑ROS; ↑RNS | ↓SOD; ↓GSH; ↓Catalase | |
| AD postmortem human cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Immunocytochemistry for GFAP. | ↑MnSOD; ↓Cu/Zn SOD |