4.6 Article

Diverse human astrocyte and microglial transcriptional responses to Alzheimer's pathology

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA
Volume 143, Issue 1, Pages 75-91

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-021-02372-6

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; Microglia; Astrocytes; Amyloid-beta; Tau; snRNA sequencing

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)
  2. Early Postdoc.Mobility scholarship from the Swiss National Science Foundation [P2GEP3_191446]
  3. Clinical Medicine Plus scholarship from the Prof Dr Max Cloetta Foundation (Zurich, Switzerland)
  4. UK Dementia Research Institute from UK DRI Ltd. - UK Medical Research Council
  5. Alzheimer's Society
  6. Alzheimer's Research UK
  7. MRC [MC_PC_17114, UKDRI-5003] Funding Source: UKRI
  8. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2GEP3_191446] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The study reveals significant differences in gene expression in astrocytes and microglia in the brains of AD patients, correlated with amyloid-beta or pTau expression. There are distinct gene expression patterns in the two cell types and pathologies, but common gene sets exist in each cell type. Additionally, different sub-clusters are found in astrocytes and microglia, characterized by transcriptional signatures related to either homeostatic functions or disease pathology.
To better define roles that astrocytes and microglia play in Alzheimer's disease (AD), we used single-nuclei RNA-sequencing to comprehensively characterise transcriptomes in astrocyte and microglia nuclei selectively enriched during isolation post-mortem from neuropathologically defined AD and control brains with a range of amyloid-beta and phospho-tau (pTau) pathology. Significant differences in glial gene expression (including AD risk genes expressed in both the astrocytes [CLU, MEF2C, IQCK] and microglia [APOE, MS4A6A, PILRA]) were correlated with tissue amyloid or pTau expression. The differentially expressed genes were distinct between with the two cell types and pathologies, although common (but cell-type specific) gene sets were enriched with both pathologies in each cell type. Astrocytes showed enrichment for proteostatic, inflammatory and metal ion homeostasis pathways. Pathways for phagocytosis, inflammation and proteostasis were enriched in microglia and perivascular macrophages with greater tissue amyloid, but IL1-related pathway enrichment was found specifically in association with pTau. We also found distinguishable sub-clusters in the astrocytes and microglia characterised by transcriptional signatures related to either homeostatic functions or disease pathology. Gene co-expression analyses revealed potential functional associations of soluble biomarkers of AD in astrocytes (CLU) and microglia (GPNMB). Our work highlights responses of both astrocytes and microglia for pathological protein clearance and inflammation, as well as glial transcriptional diversity in AD.

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