Systemic infection modifies the neuroinflammatory response in late stage Alzheimer's disease
ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA COMMUNICATIONS
Authors: Rakic, Sonja; Hung, Yat M. A.; Smith, Matthew; So, Denise; Tayler, Hannah M.; Varney, William; Wild, Joe; Harris, Scott; Holmes, Clive; Love, Seth; Stewart, William; Nicoll, James A. R.; Boche, Delphine
Abstract
Clinical studies indicate that systemic infections accelerate cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease. Animal models suggest that this may be due to enhanced pro-inflammatory changes in the brain. We have performed a postmortem human study to determine whether systemic infection modifies the neuropathology and in particular, neuroinflammation, in the late-stage of the disease. Sections of cerebral cortex and underlying white matter from controls and Alzheimer's patients who died with or without a terminal systemic infection were immunolabelled and quantified for (i) A beta and phosphorylated-tau; (ii) the inflammation-related proteins Iba1, CD68, HLA-DR, FcyRs (CD64, CD32a, CD32b, CD16), CHIL3L1, IL4R and CCR2; and (iii) T-cell marker CD3. In Alzheimer's disease, the synaptic proteins synaptophysin and PSD-95 were quantified by ELISA, and the inflammatory proteins and mRNAs by MesoScale Discovery Multiplex Assays and qPCR, respectively. Systemic infection in Alzheimer's disease was associated with decreased CD16 (p = 0.027, grey matter) and CD68 (p = 0.015, white matter); increased CD64 (p = 0.017, white matter) as well as increased protein expression of IL6 (p = 0.047) and decreased IL5 (p = 0.007), IL7 (p = 0.002), IL12/1L23p40 (p = 0.001), IL15 (p = 0.008), IL16 (p < 0.001) and IL17A (p < 0.001). Increased expression of anti-inflammatory genes CHI3L1 (p = 0.012) and IL4R (p = 0.004) were detected in this group. T-cell recruitment to the brain was reduced when systemic infection was present However, exposure to systemic infection did not modify the pathology. In Alzheimer's disease, CD68 (p = 0.026), CD64 (p = 0.002), CHI3L1 (p = 0.016), IL4R (p = 0.005) and CCR2 (p = 0.010) were increased independently of systemic infection. Our findings suggest that systemic infections modify neuroinflammatory processes in Alzheimer's disease. However, rather than promoting pro-inflammatory changes, as observed in experimental models, they seem to promote an anti-inflammatory, potentially immunosuppressive, environment in the human brain.
STAT4-mediated transcriptional repression of the IL5 gene in human memory Th2 cells
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Authors: Gonzales-van Horn, Sarah R.; Estrada, Leonardo D.; van Oers, Nicolai S. C.; Farrar, J. David
Abstract
Type I interferon (IFN-alpha/beta) plays a critical role in suppressing viral replication by driving the transcription of hundreds of interferon-sensitive genes (ISGs). While many ISGs are transcriptionally activated by the ISGF3 complex, the significance of other signaling intermediates in IFN-alpha/beta-mediated gene regulation remains elusive, particularly in rare cases of gene silencing. In human Th2 cells, IFN-alpha/beta signaling suppressed IL5 and IL13 mRNA expression during recall responses to T-cell receptor (TCR) activation. This suppression occurred through a rapid reduction in the rate of nascent transcription, independent of de novo expression of ISGs. Further, IFN-alpha/beta-mediated STAT4 activation was required for repressing the human IL5 gene, and disrupting STAT4 dimerization reversed this effect. This is the first demonstration of STAT4 acting as a transcriptional repressor in response to IFN-alpha/beta signaling and highlights the unique activity of this cytokine to acutely block the expression of an inflammatory cytokine in human T cells.