Dynamic Neuroimmune Profile during Mid-life Aging in the Female Brain and Implications for Alzheimer Risk.

TitleDynamic Neuroimmune Profile during Mid-life Aging in the Female Brain and Implications for Alzheimer Risk.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsMishra A, Shang Y, Wang Y, Bacon ER, Yin F, Brinton RD
JournaliScience
Volume23
Issue12
Pagination101829
Date Published2020 Dec 18
ISSN2589-0042
Abstract

Aging and endocrine transition states can significantly impact inflammation across organ systems. Neuroinflammation is well documented in Alzheimer disease (AD). Herein, we investigated neuroinflammation that emerges during mid-life aging, chronological and endocrinological, in the female brain as an early initiating mechanism driving AD risk later in life. Analyses were conducted in a translational rodent model of mid-life chronological and endocrinological aging followed by validation in transcriptomic profiles from women versus age-matched men. In the translational model, the neuroinflammatory profile of mid-life aging in females was endocrine and chronological state specific, dynamic, anatomically distributed, and persistent. Microarray dataset analyses of aging human hippocampus indicated a sex difference in neuroinflammatory profile in which women exhibited a profile comparable to the pattern discovered in our translational rodent model, whereas age-matched men exhibited a profile consistent with low neuroimmune activation. Translationally, these findings have implications for therapeutic interventions during mid-life to decrease late-onset AD risk.

DOI10.1016/j.isci.2020.101829
Alternate JournaliScience
PubMed ID33319170
PubMed Central IDPMC7724165
Grant ListP01 AG026572 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
R37 AG053589 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
Faculty Member Reference: 
Roberta Diaz Brinton, Ph.D
Fei Yin, Ph.D.