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Complement: AD Friend or Foe? New Work Tips Balance to Former
23 June 2008. When told what to kill, the complement system deftly deals the final blows—helping the immune system purge away pathogens and infected cells. But in the nervous system, debate rages as to whether this army of small blood proteins lives up to its auspicious name. In the decades since Japanese researchers first spotted complement components in Aβ deposits peppering the brains of Alzheimer patients (Ishii and Haga, 1984), a bewildering mix of evidence has accumulated to suggest that in AD, the complement system can both harm and help. In the June 18 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, work by Cindy Lemere of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and colleagues at Harvard Medical School adds to the evidence supporting the complement system’s beneficial role in AD. In older AD mice overexpressing mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APP) and lacking the central complement component C3, the authors report increased Aβ deposition, significant neurodegeneration, and a shift in microglia activation toward a more alternative (M2) phenotype, compared to APP mice with an intact complement system. Other scientists note that the findings should be interpreted with caution due to key pathological differences in AD patients and mouse models of the disease.

Given the link between aberrant Aβ accumulation and brain inflammation in AD, many in the field had long believed inflammation contributes to the disease process. Brain inflammatory events are mediated in large part by microglia—phagocytic cells that course through the central nervous system in search of damaged neurons and rare pathogens that get past the blood-brain barrier. Activated complement proteins spur microglia into action, causing them to unleash proinflammatory molecules that may harm surrounding nervous tissue in AD and other diseases. In this scenario, the complement system can be seen as an unwanted instigator of neurodegeneration. Support for this view comes from a study by researchers at the University of California, Irvine, showing reduced AD pathology in APP transgenic mice that lack C1q, a component key to triggering the classical complement cascade (Fonseca et al., 2004). More recent work by Ben Barres and colleagues at Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, suggests that the complement cascade helps prune excess synapses during neural development and that abnormal re-expression of key complement proteins C1q and C3 later in life may contribute to the synaptic loss evident in AD (Stevens et al., 2007 and ARF related news story).

On the flip side, a PNAS paper (Wyss-Coray et al., 2002) shows that brain-targeted inhibition of C3 in APP mice resulted in greater Aβ deposition and neurodegeneration. These and other more recent studies (Shaftel et al., 2007 and ARF related news story) have proposed a helpful role for inflammation in AD by demonstrating that microglia can be coaxed to clear amyloid plaques.

In the 2002 PNAS work, C3 activity was blocked by expressing soluble complement receptor-related protein y (sCrry) in the brains of AD transgenic mice expressing human mutant APP. In the current study, the Harvard team recapitulates and extends those findings in AD transgenic mice (expressing human APP with Swedish and Indiana mutations) that completely lack C3 (i.e., APP;C3-/- animals). Led by joint first authors Marcel Maier and Ying Peng, the researchers analyzed mice at 8, 12, and 17 months of age. In younger (8- to 12-month-old) animals, C3 deficiency had no effect on the neuropathological changes induced by the APP transgene. However, quantitative immunohistochemical and biochemical analyses revealed that 17-month-old APP;C3-/- mice had nearly twice the Aβ plaque load in hippocampus and mid-frontal cortex, compared with APP animals. Using Western blotting to detect APP and its cleavage products in mouse brain samples, the researchers showed that the absence of complement C3 had no effect on APP processing in older (12- to 17-month-old) APP;C3-/- animals relative to mice with normal C3.

When they probed the brains of the older animals for neuronal loss, the scientists found a roughly 10 percent decrease in NeuN-positive hippocampal neurons in APP;C3-/- compared with APP mice. This change was statistically significant, the authors found, but minor reductions in MAP2 immunoreactivity (a marker for neuronal dendrites and cell bodies) and synaptophysin levels (a measure of synaptic integrity) in the APP;C3-/- mice were not.

The researchers examined a battery of cell-surface markers and secreted factors to characterize the microglia in the brains of the mice. Compared to APP mice with functional C3, C3-deficient APP mice had increased microglial activation (measured by CD45 immunoreactivity) in both hippocampus and mid-frontal cortex. Upon closer examination, the activated microglia in older APP;C3-/- mice showed a number of characteristics that reflect the more alternative, or M2, microglial/macrophage phenotype—namely, increased brain levels of IL-4 and IL-10, and reduced levels of CD68, F4/80, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and tumor necrosis factor.

“This is a very timely and important paper that supports a more sophisticated view of the role of inflammation in amyloid deposition,” wrote David Morgan of the University of South Florida, Tampa, in an e-mail to ARF (see full comment below). In a review (Morgan et al., 2005), Morgan raised awareness in the AD field that microglia can adopt at least two distinct activation states with different consequences for the surrounding tissue (for examples of protective and detrimental effects of microglia, see ARF related news story). “The real question,” Morgan says, “is the extent to which this will translate to the human circumstance.”

This concern was shared by Barres, who led the 2007 study showing that two complement proteins (C1q and C3) essential for neural development can come back to haunt later in life when their synapse-pruning activity drives neurodegeneration in AD and other diseases. Compared to what happens in the human disease, mouse models of AD display “very little synapse loss” and “relatively little complement activation,” Barres noted in an e-mail to this reporter. “We clearly need much better animal models.”

Pat McGeer of the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, offers a reason for the weaker complement activation in mice compared with AD patients: in AD transgenic mice, Aβ deposits get marked for destruction, but the final stage of the alternative complement pathway (i.e., assembly of the membrane attack complex) occurs to a much lower extent than it does in human AD brains, and can be difficult to detect (Schwab et al., 2004). In human AD, opsonization—the antibody-coating process that labels Aβ plaques for ruin—happens alongside assembly of the membrane attack complex, and studies have implicated these events in nerve damage in and around senile plaques, McGeer explained in an e-mail to ARF (see full comment below).

Though it is hard at this point to determine the clinical relevance of the APP;C3-/- mouse findings, the study’s suggestion that complement plays a beneficial role in AD could affect the interpretation of recent clinical trials showing the failure of anti-inflammatory drugs to protect people from AD (for example, see ADAPT results in ARF related news story). If an anti-inflammatory drug interferes with the activity of C3, it may end up promoting amyloidosis rather than protecting against it, suggested Giulio Pasinetti of Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York.

Animal models with additional AD pathologies, such as tauopathy mice with pronounced neuronal loss, will be key to sorting out the role of inflammation in AD.—Esther Landhuis.

Reference:
Maier M, Peng Y, Jiang L, Seabrook TJ, Carroll MC, Lemere CA. Complement C3 Deficiency Leads to Accelerated Amyloid Beta Plaque Deposition and Neurodegeneration and Modulation of the Microglia/Macrophage Phenotype in Amyloid Precursor Protein Transgenic Mice. J. Neurosci. 18 June 2008;28(25):6333-6341. Abstract

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  P.L. McGeer
Submitted 23 June 2008  |  Permalink Posted 23 June 2008

The paper by Lemere and colleagues provides further evidence for the role that the complement system plays in inflammation generally, and in Aβ phagocytosis particularly. The group developed a double transgenic APP and complement C3-deficient mouse model (APP;C3-/-). The researchers then found, as one might expect, increased Aβ deposition in 17-month-old, but not 8- and 12-month-old mice, and a shift in microglial phenotype. Their results are in accord with previous results of Wyss-Coray et al. (Wyss-Coray et al., 2002), who used the slightly different strategy of developing transgenic mice overexpressing the soluble complement receptor-related protein y (sCrry) to inhibit complement. Based on such data, one might suppose that complement activation, as an important facilitator of Aβ clearance, should be stimulated to provide benefit in AD. Such stimulation can be provided by vaccination with Aβ. For transgenic mice, this is indeed the case: vaccination with Aβ produces a dramatic reduction in the Aβ load.

But there are crucial...  Read more


  Comment by:  Dave Morgan (Disclosure)
Submitted 23 June 2008  |  Permalink Posted 23 June 2008

This is a very timely and important paper that supports a more sophisticated view of the role of inflammation in amyloid deposition. Ten years ago, most in the Alzheimer research community believed that inflammation was part of the pathogenic mechanism in AD. However, increasingly, literature from the APP mice argues that the classical, M1 form of inflammation with IL-1 and TNFα expression can motivate microglia/macrophages to clear amyloid plaques. Studies ranging from LPS injections to complement inhibition (as in Maier et al.) to IL-1 overexpression demonstrate Aβ reductions associated with microglial activation (DiCarlo et al., 2001; Shaftel et al., 2007). Instead, it appears that it is the alternative, or M2 activation state of microglia, that is associated with toxicity. A key proponent of this perspective has been Carol Colton, who demonstrated increased expression of type 2 markers in AD and APP mouse brains, and enhanced toxicity when iNOS, a traditional M1 protein, was knocked out in APP mice (Colton et al., 2006a; Colton et al., 2006b). It appears that anti-Aβ...  Read more

  Comment by:  Steve Barger (Disclosure)
Submitted 24 June 2008  |  Permalink Posted 25 June 2008

It would be nice to see Andrea Tenner weigh in on this discussion. She has created a mouse with "humanized" C1q. Contrary to expectations, that study indicated there are no important differences in how Aβ interacts with C1q in humans and rodents (Li et al., 2008). She also showed that addition of C1q to cultured neurons could protect against Aβ toxicity (Pisalyaput and Tenner, 2008). The latter, if I may say so, complements the papers discussed above.

References:
Li M, Ager RR, Fraser DA, Tjokro NO, Tenner AJ. 2008. Development of a humanized C1q A chain knock-in mouse: Assessment of antibody independent ss-amyloid induced complement activation. Mol Immunol. 45:3244-52. Abstract

Pisalyaput K, Tenner AJ. 2008. Complement component C1q inhibits beta-amyloid- and serum amyloid P-induced neurotoxicity via caspase- and calpain-independent mechanisms. J Neurochem. 104:696-707. Abstract

View all comments by Steve Barger


  Comment by:  Terrence Town
Submitted 24 June 2008  |  Permalink Posted 25 June 2008
  I recommend the Primary Papers

The paper by Maier, Lemere, and colleagues (2008) provides an extension of previous findings by Wyss-Coray, Masliah, and coworkers (2002) showing that inhibiting the complement cascade in aged AD model mice (in the former case by knocking out C3; in the latter by expressing the complement inhibitor, soluble complement receptor-related protein y) promotes cerebral amyloidosis, as judged by Aβ plaque load and biochemical analysis of insoluble Aβ. Maier and colleagues further noted a trend toward increased Aβ levels in blood plasma from cross-bred (APP;C3-/-) mice, reduced NeuN-positivity in crossed mouse hippocampal pyramidal neurons, and an increase in more “anti-inflammatory” microglia. These results add to the emerging complex picture of brain inflammation in the context of AD-like pathology, and offer additional insight into the beneficial role of the complement cascade in these transgenic AD model mice.

This interesting work by Maier et al. raises a number of questions regarding the interplay between innate immune cells (i.e., microglia and macrophages) and AD-like...  Read more


  Primary Papers: Complement C3 deficiency leads to accelerated amyloid beta plaque deposition and neurodegeneration and modulation of the microglia/macrophage phenotype in amyloid precursor protein transgenic mice.

Comment by:  Takaomi Saido, ARF Advisor
Submitted 29 June 2008  |  Permalink Posted 1 July 2008
  I recommend this paper

  Primary Papers: Complement C3 deficiency leads to accelerated amyloid beta plaque deposition and neurodegeneration and modulation of the microglia/macrophage phenotype in amyloid precursor protein transgenic mice.

Comment by:  Johan van Beek
Submitted 26 August 2008  |  Permalink Posted 28 August 2008
  I recommend this paper

This important study by Cynthia Lemere of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and collaborators at Harvard Medical School further supports a beneficial role of intracerebral activation of the complement system, possibly by promoting phagocytosis of Aβ. First authors Marcel Maier and Ying Peng, and colleagues have generated a C3-deficient amyloid precursor protein (APP) transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) to specifically investigate the role of the complement system central component C3. APP transgenic mice lacking C3 were found to exhibit increased amyloid plaque burden, enhanced neurodegeneration, and shifted microglia activation toward a phenotype often found to be associated with tissue repair processes. These observations further support a beneficial role for complement component C3 in plaque clearance in APP mice. This is in line with a previous report describing enhanced pathology in APP transgenic mice with brain-targeted expression of a soluble form of complement receptor-related protein y (sCrry), a potent inhibitor of C3 convertases (Wyss-Coray et al.,...  Read more

  Primary Papers: Complement C3 deficiency leads to accelerated amyloid beta plaque deposition and neurodegeneration and modulation of the microglia/macrophage phenotype in amyloid precursor protein transgenic mice.

Comment by:  Maria I. Fonseca, Andrea Tenner
Submitted 31 August 2008  |  Permalink Posted 5 September 2008
  I recommend this paper

The complexity of the role of complement in Alzheimer disease has been further reinforced by this publication from Lemere and colleagues reporting increased Aβ deposition in 17-month APP C3-/- relative to the APP (J20) C3 sufficient mice. As noted by others in this forum, the use of complement-deficient and transgenic rodent models has provided support for both detrimental (Fonseca et al., 2004) and beneficial (Maier et al., 2008; Wyss-Coray et al., 2002) roles of specific complement components in AD models. Certainly the increased expression of complement components and its activation products shown by many labs provide evidence that it is present and activated in mouse models and in the human disease. Others have also seen reduction in pathology using complement inhibitors in APP mouse models (Bergamaschini et al., 2004) and more studies should be forthcoming soon.

In the APPC3-/- animal model reported here by Maier and colleagues, an increase in plaque load, neuronal loss (albeit quite small), and CD45 staining in the plaque area in the APPC3-/- animals relative to the...  Read more

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