Microglia in Alzheimer’s disease become dysfunctional in the absence of CX3CR1, and this dysfunction results in the cascade of neurotoxic events in the brain.

Microglia in Alzheimer’s Disease
CX3CR1 has been shown in both past human and animal studies to be downregulated in neurodegenerative diseases when microglia are activated. The CX3CR1-V249I, a loss-of-function gene variant, was first identified and associated with macular degeneration and was later shown to relate to neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease and ALS. In 2020, Puntambekar and her co-investigators received a $3 million National Institute on Aging grant to study the role of CX3CR1 in Alzheimer’s disease.TOP INSIGHT
Deleting CX3CR1, a microglial gene associated with neurodegenerative diseases, in Alzheimer’s disease animal models resulted in an aggravated disease state and accumulation of plaques in the brain. The deficiency of the gene also impaired the movement of microglia—the brain’s immune cells—toward the plaques.
“The study has made a connection not just between amyloid and tau, but how microglia can shape the entire disease process,” Puntambekar said.
In the absence of this gene, the microglia—which act as the first line of defense against viruses, toxic materials and damaged neurons—cannot move closer to plaques to clear up proteins. This occurs early in the disease and leads to more neurotoxic events, such as accumulations of other toxic species of amyloid beta and aggravated tau in later disease stages.
Some of those species of amyloid beta are not deposited in the brain as “insoluble” plaques, Puntambekar said, but rather accumulate in the brain as soluble plaques and have been shown to also be associated with cognitive decline. These species were increased in the absence of CX3CR1, she added.
Most therapies that target amyloid beta proteins in the brain focus on insoluble plaques, but drugs for years have been proven ineffective in clinical trials.
Source-Eurekalert
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