The Alzheimer’s disease risk factor APOE4 drives pro-inflammation in human astrocytes via HDAC-dependent repression of TAGLN3

authors

  • Arnaud Laurie
  • Benech Philippe
  • Greetham Louise
  • Stephan Delphine
  • Jimenez Angélique
  • Jullien Nicolas
  • García-González Laura
  • Tsvetkov Philipp O
  • Devred François
  • Sancho-Martinez Ignacio
  • Belmonte Juan-Carlos Izpisua
  • Baranger Kevin
  • Rivera Santiago
  • Nivet Emmanuel

document type

UNDEFINED

abstract

The Apolipoprotein E4 ( APOE4 ) is the major allelic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer’s disease (AD). APOE4 associates with a pro-inflammatory phenotype increasingly considered as critical in AD initiation and progression. Yet, the mechanisms driving an APOE4-dependent neuroinflammation remain unelucidated. Leveraging patient specific human induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) we demonstrate inflammatory chronicity and hyperactivated responses upon cytokines in human APOE4 astrocytes via a novel mechanism. We uncovered that APOE4 represses Transgelin 3 (TAGLN3), a new interacting partner of IκBα, thus increasing the NF-kB activity. The transcriptional repression of TAGLN3 was shown to result from an APOE4-dependent histone deacetylase (HDAC) activity. The functional relevance of TAGLN3 was demonstrated by the attenuation of APOE4-driven neuroinflammation after TAGLN3 supplementation. Importantly, TAGLN3 downregulation was confirmed in the brain of AD patients. Our findings highlight the APOE4-TAGLN3 axis as a new pathogenic pathway that paves the way for the development of therapeutics to prevent maladaptive inflammatory responses in APOE4 carriers, while placing TAGLN3 downregulation as a potential biomarker of AD.

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