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Science

Study Title
Microglial metabolism is a pivotal factor in sexual dimorphism in Alzheimer’s disease
Publication
Communications Biology
Author(s)

Marie-Victoire Guillot-Sestier, Lisha Josh, Edward T. Chouchani, Ana Rubio Araiz1, Virginia Mela, Aline Sayd Gaban, Eoin O’Neill, Evanna L. Mills & Marina A. Lynch

Abstract

Age and sex are major risk factors in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) with a higher incidence of the disease in females. Neuroinflammation, which is a hallmark of AD, contributes to disease pathogenesis and is inexorably linked with inappropriate microglial activation and neurodegeneration. We investigated sex-related differences in microglia in APP/PS1 mice and in post-mortem tissue from AD patients. Changes in genes that are indicative of microglial activation were preferentially increased in cells from female APP/PS1 mice and cells from males and females were morphological, metabolically and functionally distinct. Microglia from female APP/PS1 mice were glycolytic and less phagocytic and associated with increased amyloidosis whereas microglia from males were amoeboid and this was also the case in post-mortem tissue from male AD patients, where plaque load was reduced. We propose that the sex-related differences in microglia are likely to explain, at least in part, the sexual dimorphism in AD.

Date
June 10, 2021
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