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김정석

Kim, Jung-Seok
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Perivascular cells induce microglial phagocytic states and synaptic engulfment via SPP1 in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease

Author(s)
De Schepper, SebastiaanGe, Judy Z. Z.Kim, Jung-SeokHong, Soyon
Issued Date
2023-03
DOI
10.1038/s41593-023-01257-z
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/87045
Citation
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, v.26, no.3, pp.406 - 415
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by synaptic loss, which can result from dysfunctional microglial phagocytosis and complement activation. However, what signals drive aberrant microglia-mediated engulfment of synapses in AD is unclear. Here we report that secreted phosphoprotein 1 (SPP1/osteopontin) is upregulated predominantly by perivascular macrophages and, to a lesser extent, by perivascular fibroblasts. Perivascular SPP1 is required for microglia to engulf synapses and upregulate phagocytic markers including C1qa, Grn and Ctsb in presence of amyloid-beta oligomers. Absence of Spp1 expression in AD mouse models results in prevention of synaptic loss. Furthermore, single-cell RNA sequencing and putative cell-cell interaction analyses reveal that perivascular SPP1 induces microglial phagocytic states in the hippocampus of a mouse model of AD. Altogether, we suggest a functional role for SPP1 in perivascular cells-to-microglia crosstalk, whereby SPP1 modulates microglia-mediated synaptic engulfment in mouse models of AD. Microglia mediate aberrant synapse engulfment in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here the authors show a perivascular cells-to-microglia crosstalk that induces microglia phagocytic state resulting in synapse engulfment in two mouse models of AD.
Publisher
NATURE PORTFOLIO
ISSN
1097-6256

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