Linh Le, Rebecca L Lowery, Nisha Arya, Florence P Varodayan, M Kerry OBanion, Ania K Majewska
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common age-related dementia. Lifestyle factors, including alcohol use, can increase the risk of AD. While human studies demonstrate that alcohol use can negatively impact AD risk and disease progression, the underlying ethanol-dependent mechanisms that increase Aβ burden and impair cognition remain elusive. We have recently shown that ethanol can acutely affect microglial dynamics, which are critical to microglial function, and many other studies have reported inflammatory activation of microglia after long-term ethanol exposure in both humans and animal models. Here, we administered 4 weeks of ethanol at dosages that mimic human binge drinking to 2.5-month-old male 5xFAD mice, a common mouse model of AD. After a 2-week abstinence period, we performed behavioral assays and analyzed amyloid pathology and microglial morphology in the subiculum where amyloid pathology develops earlier than in other brain regions. We also analyzed the microglial transcriptome in the hippocampus. We found that ethanol exposure facilitated amyloid pathology and worsened cognitive function in 5xFAD mice, while microglial expression patterns, arborization, and phagocytosis appeared unchanged. Overall, our results suggest that pronounced ethanol exposure, when started early in the disease before amyloid pathology is established, can worsen AD progression in an amyloidosis model.
期刊介绍:
EJN is the journal of FENS and supports the international neuroscientific community by publishing original high quality research articles and reviews in all fields of neuroscience. In addition, to engage with issues that are of interest to the science community, we also publish Editorials, Meetings Reports and Neuro-Opinions on topics that are of current interest in the fields of neuroscience research and training in science. We have recently established a series of ‘Profiles of Women in Neuroscience’. Our goal is to provide a vehicle for publications that further the understanding of the structure and function of the nervous system in both health and disease and to provide a vehicle to engage the neuroscience community. As the official journal of FENS, profits from the journal are re-invested in the neuroscientific community through the activities of FENS.