Topological analyses in APP/PS1 mice reveal that astrocytes do not migrate to amyloid-[Beta] plaques

Although the clustering of GFAP immunopositive astrocytes around amyloid-... plaques in Alzheimer's disease has led to the widespread assumption that plaques attract astrocytes, recent studies suggest that astrocytes stay put in injury. Here we reexamine astrocyte migration to plaques, using qu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2015-12, Vol.112 (51), p.15556
Hauptverfasser: Galea, Elena, Morrison, Will, Hudry, Eloise, Arbel-Ornath, Michal, Bacskai, Brian J, Gómez-Isla, Teresa, Stanley, H Eugene, Hyman, Bradley T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although the clustering of GFAP immunopositive astrocytes around amyloid-... plaques in Alzheimer's disease has led to the widespread assumption that plaques attract astrocytes, recent studies suggest that astrocytes stay put in injury. Here we reexamine astrocyte migration to plaques, using quantitative spatial analysis and computer modeling to investigate the topology of astrocytes in 3D images obtained by two-photon microscopy of living APP/PS1 mice and WT littermates. In WT mice, cortical astrocyte topology fits a model in which a liquid of hard spheres exclude each other in a confined space. Plaques do not disturb this arrangement except at very large plaque loads, but, locally, cause subtle outward shifts of the astrocytes located in three tiers around plaques. These data suggest that astrocytes respond to plaque-induced neuropil injury primarily by changing phenotype, and hence function, rather than location. (ProQuest: ... denotes formulae/symbols omitted.)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490