Astrocytes are known as cells that control many functions of the healthy as well as diseased brain, including the control of regenerative responses.
In patients suffering from Alzheimerās disease, astrocytes in the vicinity of amyloid plaques and degenerating neurons become hyperactive.
Until now, many researchers considered this astrocyte hyperactivity in the brains of Alzheimerās disease patients as negative and contributing to the progression of this devastating disease.
The current study generated groundbreaking data with important implications. The US and Swedish research teams used a mouse model of Alzheimerās disease in which they genetically reduced astrocyte hyperactivity. They found that such mice developed more amyloid deposits and showed more pronounced signs of neurodegeneration than mice with normal response of astrocytes.
This suggests that astrocyte response to the disease process slows down the disease progression.
– We are truly exited about these findings. Now we need to understand the mechanism underlying the beneficial role of hyperactive astrocytes in Alzheimerās disease progression. Understanding this process on a molecular level should help us to design strategies for optimization of the astrocyte response, says Prof. Milos Pekny.
– We see that astrocyte hyperactivity in Alzheimerās disease brains is tightly connected to activation of microglia, the brainās own immune cells. This implies that the two cell types communicate to mediate a coordinated response to disease states, says Prof. Jin-Moo Lee.
This international collaborative team of neuroscientists is pursuing further studies to understand molecular mechanisms by which astrocytes prevent the deposition of amyloid plaques in Alzheimerās disease.