Microglial immunometabolism endophenotypes contribute to sex difference in Alzheimer's disease

Author:

Hou Yuan1,Caldwell Jessica Z. K.23,Lathia Justin D.24,Leverenz James B.5,Pieper Andrew A.678910,Cummings Jeffrey11,Cheng Feixiong12

Affiliation:

1. Genomic Medicine Institute Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Department of Molecular Medicine Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

3. Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute Las Vegas Nevada USA

4. Department of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Science Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute Cleveland Ohio USA

5. Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute Cleveland Ohio USA

6. Brain Health Medicines Center Harrington Discovery Institute University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center Cleveland Ohio USA

7. Department of Psychiatry Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

8. Geriatric Psychiatry GRECC Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center Cleveland Ohio USA

9. Institute for Transformative Molecular Medicine School of Medicine Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

10. Department of Neurosciences School of Medicine Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

11. Chambers‐Grundy Center for Transformative Neuroscience Department of Brain Health School of Integrated Health Sciences University of Nevada Las Vegas Las Vegas Nevada USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThe molecular mechanisms that contribute to sex differences, in particular female predominance, in Alzheimer's disease (AD) prevalence, symptomology, and pathology, are incompletely understood.MethodsTo address this problem, we investigated cellular metabolism and immune responses (“immunometabolism endophenotype”) across AD individuals as a function of sex with diverse clinical diagnosis of cognitive status at death (cogdx), Braak staging, and Consortium to Establish a Registry for AD (CERAD) scores using human cortex metabolomics and transcriptomics data from the Religious Orders Study / Memory and Aging Project (ROSMAP) cohort.ResultsWe identified sex‐specific metabolites, immune and metabolic genes, and pathways associated with the AD diagnosis and progression. We identified female‐specific elevation in glycerophosphorylcholine and N‐acetylglutamate, which are AD inflammatory metabolites involved in interleukin (IL)‐17 signaling, C‐type lectin receptor, interferon signaling, and Toll‐like receptor pathways. We pinpointed distinct microglia‐specific immunometabolism endophenotypes (i.e., lipid‐ and amino acid‐specific IL‐10 and IL‐17 signaling pathways) between female and male AD subjects. In addition, female AD subjects showed evidence of diminished excitatory neuron and microglia communications via glutamate‐mediated immunometabolism.DiscussionOur results point to new understanding of the molecular basis for female predominance in AD, and warrant future independent validations with ethnically diverse patient cohorts to establish a likely causal relationship of microglial immunometabolism in the sex differences in AD.HIGHLIGHTS Sex‐specific immune metabolites, gene networks and pathways, are associated with Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis and disease progression. Female AD subjects exhibit microglial immunometabolism endophenotypes characterized by decreased glutamate metabolism and elevated interleukin‐10 pathway activity. Female AD subjects showed a shift in glutamate‐mediated cell‐cell communications between excitatory neurons to microglia and astrocyte.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Health Policy,Epidemiology

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