Document detail
ID

oai:HAL:hal-04029445v1

Topic
Astrocytes Regulatory T cells Neur... Astrocytes Regulatory T cells Neuroinflammation Alzheimer's disease [SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]
Author
Stym-Popper, Grégoire Matta, Karen Chaigneau, Thomas Rupra, Roshan Demetriou, Alexandros Fouquet, Stéphane Dansokho, Cira Toly-Ndour, Cécile Dorothée, Guillaume
Langue
en
Editor

HAL CCSD;BioMed Central

Category

CNRS - Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Year

2023

listing date

12/15/2023

Keywords
c3-positive ad subtypes alzheimer depletion tregs astrocyte disease markers a2-like impact regulatory cells phenotypes reactivity pathology amyloid reactive
Metrics

Abstract

International audience; Background Increasing evidence supports a key role for peripheral immune processes in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), highlighting an intricate interplay between brain resident glial cells and both innate and adaptive peripheral immune effectors.

We previously showed that regulatory T cells (Tregs) have a beneficial impact on disease progression in AD-like pathology, notably by modulating the microglial response associated with Aβ deposits in a mouse model of amyloid pathology.

Besides microglia, reactive astrocytes also play a critical role in neuroinflammatory processes associated with AD.

Different phenotypes of reactive astrocytes have previously been characterized, including A1-like neurotoxic and A2-like neuroprotective subtypes.

However, the precise impact of Tregs on astrocyte reactivity and phenotypes in AD still remains poorly defined.

Methods We assessed the impact of Treg immunomodulation on astrocyte reactivity in a mouse model of AD-like amyloid pathology.

Using 3D imaging, we carried out extensive morphological analyses of astrocytes following either depletion or amplification of Tregs.

We further assessed the expression of several A1-and A2-like markers by immunofluorescence and RT-qPCR.

Results Modulation of Tregs did not significantly impact the magnitude of global astrocyte reactivity in the brain nor in the close vicinity of cortical amyloid deposits.

We did not observe changes in the number, morphology, or branching complexity of astrocytes according to immunomodulation of Tregs.

However, early transient depletion of Tregs modulated the balance of reactive astrocyte subtypes, resulting in increased C3-positive A1-like phenotypes associated with amyloid deposits.

Conversely, early depletion of Tregs decreased markers of A2-like phenotypes of reactive astrocytes associated with larger amyloid deposits.

Intriguingly, modulation of Tregs also impacted the cerebral expression of several markers of A1-like subsets in healthy mice.

Conclusions Our study suggests that Tregs contribute to modulate and fine-tune the balance of reactive astrocyte subtypes in AD-like amyloid pathology, by dampening C3-positive astrocytes in favor of A2-like phenotypes.

This effect of Tregs may partly relate to their capacity at modulating steady state astrocyte reactivity and homeostasis.

Our data further highlight the need for refined markers of astrocytes subsets and strategy of analysis for better deciphering the complexity of astrocyte reactivity in neurodegeneration.

Stym-Popper, Grégoire,Matta, Karen,Chaigneau, Thomas,Rupra, Roshan,Demetriou, Alexandros,Fouquet, Stéphane,Dansokho, Cira,Toly-Ndour, Cécile,Dorothée, Guillaume, 2023, Regulatory T cells decrease C3-positive reactive astrocytes in Alzheimer-like pathology, HAL CCSD;BioMed Central

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