Abstract
Astrocytes, the most numerous cells in the brain, weave the canvas of the grey matter and act as the main element of the homoeostatic system of the brain. They shape the microarchitecture of the brain, form neuronal-glial-vascular units, regulate the blood–brain barrier, control microenvirionment of the central nervous system and defend nervous system against multitude of insults. Here, we overview the pathological potential of astroglia in various forms of dementias, and hypothesise that both atrophy of astroglia and reactive hypertrophic astrogliosis may develop in parallel during neurodegenerative processes resulting in dementia. We also show that in the transgenic model of Alzheimer's disease, reactive hypertrophic astrocytes surround the neuritic plaques, whereas throughout the brain parenchyma astroglial cells undergo atrophy. Astroglial atrophy may account for early changes in synaptic plasticity and cognitive impairments, which develop before gross neurodegenerative alterations.
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Main
Astrocytes, for the first time visualised by Otto Deiters1 and Christianised by Michael von Lenhossek2 (for historical overview, see also references3, 4), are the main type of glia in the central nervous system (CNS). The astrocytes, which dwell in both grey and white matter, are the main element of brain homoeostatic system, being responsible for all aspects of metabolic support, nutrition, control of ion and neurotransmitter environment, regulation of brain-blood barrier and defence of the CNS.5, 6 In addition, astroglial cells are endowed with numerous signalling cascades, which include a wide array of plasmalemmal neurotransmitter receptors and intracellular second messenger pathways.7, 8, 9, 10 These pathways in combination with trans-cellular communication routes represented by gap junctions11, 12 and regulated gliotransmitter release13 support information processing within glial networks, the mechanisms and functional relevance of which remains essentially enigmatic.
The main type of astroglia in the grey matter, the protoplasmic astrocytes, are characterised by complex morphology with elaborated processes, which cover neuronal membranes, residing within the astrocytic territories; the latter being defined by the arborisation of a single astrocyte. Importantly, a single-astroglial microanatomical domain is essentially free from the processes of other astrocytes, giving the grey matter in the brain and in the spinal cord a regular parcellating structure.14 A single astrocyte in the rodent brain has a volume ∼66 000 μm3, and the membrane of this astrocyte covers around 140 000 synapses lying within the astroglial domain;15 human astrocytes are considerably larger and more complex and their processes wrap up to 2 millions of synapses.16 Protoplasmic astrocytes send processes to neighbouring blood vessels, where these processes form endfeet plastering the capillary wall and participating in formation of blood–brain barrier. As a result, astroglial cells integrate neurones and blood vessels into relatively independent neuronal-glial-vascular units. Astroglial endfeet are capable of releasing vasoactive substances that control local blood flow and coordinate the latter with neuronal activity.17, 18, 19
Individual astroglial domains are further integrated into an internally continuous superstructure, because the peripheral processes of astroglial cells are coupled through gap junctions, which form a specific pathway for intercellular communications binding astroglia into a functional syncytium. This coupling most likely has anatomical specificity, providing for specific organisation of glial networks: for example, in somato-sensory cortex astroglial coupling is restricted to the barrel superstructure.20 Gap junctions provide for intercellular diffusion of variety of substances, including ions, second messengers and metabolites such as glucose and ATP.21, 22, 23 This intercellular route underlies long-distance communications within glial networks; one of the examples of such communication is represented by glial calcium waves;21, 24, 25 yet propagating waves of other molecules can also be relevant for intercellular signalling and information processing.26
Functional integration between neuronal and glial networks is accomplished mainly through chemical transmission, although there are incidental appearances of neuronal–glial gap junctions.27, 28 Synaptic transmission in neuronal–glial circuitry occurs either at the level of tripartite synapse (when perisynaptic astroglial processes are directly exposed to neurotransmitter released from the neuronal terminals,29, 30) or in neuronal–glial synapses.31, 32 The mechanisms of glia to neurones signalling are more complex; at least in part they may involve the exocytotic release of gliotransmitters.13
Astroglia in neurological diseases
Progression and outcome of neurological diseases are determined by the balance between destruction, neuroprotection and regeneration. In this context, glial cells are invariably involved in every kind of neuropathology, which, to a very large extent, is shaped by glial performance.6, 33 Astrocytes, in accordance with their homoeostatic function, are deeply involved in neural diseases. Astroglia forms the first line of brain defence by controlling the volume and composition of extracellular space. Astrocytes buffer an excess of extracellular K+, thus maintaining neuronal excitability,34 control extracellular levels of glutamate,35, 36 thereby limiting the intrinsic excitotoxicity of the latter, regulate fluid movements and provide the main antioxidant system in the brain.37 At the very same time astroglial cells can contribute to neuronal damage, when, for example, severe insults compromise astrocyte metabolism, which leads to a depolarisation and reversal of glutamate uptake system, the latter underlying the release of additional glutamate, thus exacerbating the brain damage.6
Acute and chronic brain insults trigger a specific glial reaction, generally known as reactive astrogliosis, represented by a complex morphofunctional remodelling of astrocytes.38 Reactive astrogliosis is a defensive brain reaction which is aimed at (i) isolation of the damaged area from the rest of the CNS tissue, (ii) reconstruction of the blood–brain barrier and (iii) facilitation of the remodelling of brain circuits in areas surrounding the lesioned region.39, 40 As a result, astrogliosis comes in different guises. Astrocytes surrounding the lesion undergo a robust hypertrophy and proliferation, which ultimately ends up in complete substitution of previously existing tissue architecture with a permanent glial scar; this process is called anisomorphic (i.e., changing the morphology) astrogliosis. In astrocytes more distal to the damage, the reactive changes are much milder and, although astroglial cells modify their appearance and undergo multiple biochemical and immunological changes, they do not distort the normal architecture of CNS tissue, but rather permit growth of neurites and synaptogenesis, thus facilitating the remodelling of neuronal networks. This type of astrocyte reaction is defined as isomorphic (i.e., preserving morphology) astrogliosis.
Astroglia and dementia
Dementia is the ultimate scourge of mankind, being generally absent in every other animal species; and as such it may be considered as the most appalling and horrible disease, because it effectively robs human beings from their intelligence and turns them into helpless entities. The causes of dementia are many, ranging from traumatic injuries (mechanical, chemical or as a result of irradiation) and viral infections, which may predispose to dementia-related chronic neurodegenerative conditions, to the intrinsic neurodegenerative processes associated with genetic factors, predispositions and other yet unknown reasons. The pathological role of astroglia in dementiae begun to be explored only very recently; however, some generalisations can already be drawn.
First and foremost, both astrogliosis and astroglial dystrophy are manifest in different types of dementia; furthermore, both these processes may develop in parallel depending on the disease form and/or stage. The frontotemporal dementias (the clinical term covering several types of sporadic non-Alzheimer cognitive disruptions, which include e.g., Pick's disease and frontotemporal lobar degeneration), is, for example, associated with a very early and profound apoptotic death and dystrophy of astrocytes.41 The degree of astroglial loss directly correlates with the severity of dementia. Conversely, other study, using postmortem tissues from 21 frontotemporal dementia cases, found prominent astrogliosis in the frontal and temporal cortices at the very early stages of the disease, with astrocyte densities increasing by 4–5 times of the control.42
Astrogliosis also assumes the leading pathological role in thalamic dementia (the rather rare form of specific dementia of unknown aetiology). Numerous alterations of protoplasmic astrocytes, manifested by highly localised proliferation of perivascular and peryneuronal astroglial processes, believed to be a primary pathological change, which can produce dementia even without severe neuronal loss.43 Similarly, in HIV-1-associated dementia (HAD) significant astroglial hypertrophy and increase in GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein) expression is observed in entorhinal cortex and hippocampus.44 Furthermore, there are indications that HIV-1 infected reactive astrocytes, together with activated microglial cells, may constitute a primary cause of neuronal damage, through the release of various inflammatory and death factors.45, 46 At the same time, however, HAD also leads to a prominent apoptotic death of astrocytes especially in the patients with rapidly progressing cognitive deficits.47
Astroglia and Alzheimer's disease
Alzheimer's disease (AD), existing in both genetic (familial AD or FAD) and sporadic forms,48 is characterised by severe neurodegeneration associated with an occurrence of specific histopathological markers represented by focal extracellular deposits of fibrillar β-amyloid (also called neuritic plaques) in brain parenchima and in the wall of blood vessels and intraneuronal accumulation of neurofibrillary tangles composed from abnormal hyperphosphorylated tau filaments. The progression of AD is rather stereotypic with initial neurodegenerative events appearing in the transentorhinal cortex, which afterwards spread to the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus. Subsequently, the spreading wave of neurodegeneration swallows the rest of the temporal, frontal and parietal lobes.49, 50 At the advanced stage of the AD, the grey matter undergoes severe damage manifested by a profound loss of neurones and synaptic contacts.
The pathological potential of glial cells in progression of dementia (as well as in other types of brain pathology) was originally suggested by Alois Alzheimer himself in 1910.51 Many studies of the AD-related pathological potential of astroglia have focused on the investigations of the effects of β-amyloid on astrocytes. The treatment of cultured glial cells with aggregated β-amyloid or with amyloid plaques isolated from human AD brains triggered reactive astrogliosis.52 In mixed astroglial-neuronal cultures β-amyloid peptide (Aβ 1–42) and its toxic fragment (Aβ 25–35) provoked sporadic increases and/or oscillations in cytosolic calcium [Ca2+]i, which lasted for many hours.53 These [Ca2+]i responses were observed solely in astrocytes and never in neurones and were generated by Ca2+ influx from extracellular space, most likely through transmembrane channels formed by Aβ proteins. Importantly, astroglial [Ca2+]i fluctuations were somehow linked to neuronal death, which occurred 24 h after Aβ treatment; inhibition of Ca2+ influx had a clear neuroprotective effect.53
In the AD human tissue the main astroglial reaction found hitherto is represented by prominent astrogliosis, mostly observed in the cells surrounding amyloid plaques.54 Importantly, activated astrocytes are capable of accumulating large amounts of Aβ;55 the later being taken up by astrocytes in association with neuronal debris. In addition, reactive astrocytes seem to accumulate large amounts of neuronal subtype of nicotinic cholinoreceptor (α7nAChRs), which is known to have an exceptionally high affinity to β-amyloid. Astroglial β-amyloid deposits are clearly associated with plaques, as astrocytes positioned away from the plaques show no β-amyloid burden.54, 55 Processes of activated astrocytes were also reported to participate in plaques formation.54, 55
At the very same time astroglial changes during AD progression remain virtually unexplored. The main reason for this is purely experimental as for many years the suitable animal models for AD were absent.
Animal models of AD
Alzheimer's disease, as every other dementia, is a sole prerogative of humans; no animal suffers from AD.56 Hence, substantial efforts were invested in producing relevant animal models of AD (for a comprehensive review of literature, see references57, 58). Initial models of AD were simply normal aged animals,59, 60 which showed cholinergic involution associated (in monkeys) with β-amyloid deposition.61 As the AD is manifested by a loss of cholinergic neurones,62 several cholinergic models of the disease were created. Among these, the most relevant were the rodent models with lesions in the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (nbm) that is the equivalent of the nucleus of Meynert in humans.56, 63, 64 These models offered the possibility to investigate the differences in structure, function and behaviour of the cholinergic systems in young and aged animals.63, 64 The majority of these models, however, were created by using non-selective excitotoxic toxins such as NMDA, ibotenic acid, quisqualic acid and certain alkaloid substances.56 More refined lesion models used more selective and specific toxins that affected only cholinergic neurones in the relevant areas, such as septum, nbm and the diagonal band of Broca, but preserved non-cholinergic neurones.56, 65 These models were produced by using AF64A cholinotoxin, which binds to the high affinity choline uptake system, and 192 IgG-saporin that binds selectively and irreversibly to low affinity nerve growth factor receptor interrupting cholinergic neuronal protein synthesis. Both these interventions lead to selective impairment and death of cholinergic neurones.
None of the models mentioned above, however, mimicked the histopathology (plaques and tangles) and progression of AD. Therefore several experimental transgenic animals that replicate various neuropathological features of AD have been developed (see Table 1 and reference58). Initially, simple transgenic models harbouring single-mutated β-amyloid-related proteins (amyloid precursor protein (APP) or presenilines, PS) or mutated tau were created. The very first APP transgenic animal showing an AD-like pathology was developed in 1995 by Games et al.66 This model was called PDAPP (single-transgenic mice expressing the ‘Swedish’ and ‘Indiana’ APP mutations Asp664 to Ala (PDAPP(D664A)) and showed many pathological features of AD, including extracellular β-amyloid deposits, neuritic dystrophy, astrogliosis and memory impairments, yet the latter did not correlate with the degree of β-amyloid deposition.58, 66 Subsequently, Hsiao et al.67 developed the transgenic mice carrying APPswe mutation (Tg2576 mice) using a prion protein vector. These animals had abundant Aβ plaques as well as a memory and learning impairment from 9 months of age. Subsequently, the double-APP mutation, resulting the APP23 mouse was created. This model showed a 14% loss of hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons.
Mutations in PS proteins account for the majority of cases of FAD.58 To address the role of genetic risk factors in APP processing and memory, double transgenic have been created. Co-expression of PS1dE9 with APP resulted in a viable model that showed accelerated Aβ deposition and memory deficits without tangle formation.71 Expression of mutant APP on an ApoE knockout background did not affect the age of onset of Aβ plaques but instead of fibrillar Aβ mature plaques, only diffuse plaques were formed, suggesting that ApoE affects fibrillogenesis and/or clearance of Aβ.76
The pathological tau animals were developed in parallel, the first model being created in 1995;77 these transgenic animals showed somatodendritic localisation of hyperphosphorlation of tau, but have not developed neurofibrillary tangle pathology (NFT). After identification of the pathogenic mutations of tau in FTDP-17, different transgenic models with clear neuronal NFT were produced.57, 58 The TauP301L (single-transgenic mice expressing the Pro301 to Leu tau mutation (P301L)) mutation is the most common associated mutation linked with FTDP-17.78 Transgenic mice overexpressing TauP301L exhibit neurofibrillary tangles without Aβ pathology and/or neuronal loss, except for the spinal cord (Table 1; 58, 78).
The triple-transgenic (3xTg-AD) AD animal model
One of the most advanced AD animal models is represented by the triple-transgenic mice developed in 2003 by Salvatore Oddo and Frank LaFerla. These animals (the 3xTg-AD mouse model) harbour the mutant genes for amyloid precursor protein (APPSwe), for presenilin 1 PS1M146V and for tauP301L.75, 79 These mice are recognised as relevant AD model because they show temporal- and region-specific Aβ and tau pathology, which closely resembles that seen in the human AD brain. As well as progressively developing plaques and tangles, the 3xTg-AD animals also show clear functional and cognitive impairments including LTP, spatial memory and long-term memory deficits. These all are manifest in an age-related manner; most importantly functional deficits precede the appearance of histological markers.75, 79 Cognitive deficits in the 3xTg-AD model correlate with the accumulation of intraneuronal Aβ.80, 81
It has to be noted, however, that all animal models of AD developed so far have some limitations, the most serious one being the absence of significant neuronal loss. This may reflect some intrinsic differences between human and animal brain, shorter lifespan of experimental animals or influence of other yet unknown factors. At the same time absence of neuronal loss in animals undergoing severe amyloidosis may also question the toxic potential of neuritic plaques.
Glial atrophy and astrogliosis in transgenic AD animals
We characterised morphology of astroglia in the hippocampus of male 3xTG-AD mice using single and dual immunohistochemical labelling.82 For this labelling, we used the antibodies to GFAP an astroglia cytoskeleton-specific protein which expression varies between different brain regions and is upregulated upon reactive astrogliosis, or combined GFAP immunostaining with antibodies against β-amyloid. Morphology of GFAP-positive astrolglial profiles was reconstructed from series of optical confocal planes taken from 50 μm thick fixed brain slices. After the reconstruction of individual astrocytes the following parameters were determined: surface area, volume and cellular complexity (area versus volume; for the detailed description of imaging/analysis techniques, see references83, 84).
Morphological characterisation of GFAP-positive astroglial cells was performed on animals of different ages, from 3 to 12 months. To our surprise we found consistent reduction in the GFAP expression (determined as surface and volume of GFAP-positive profiles), which progressed with age. In very young animals (3 months old), which did not have any signs of AD pathology, astroglial morphology was already somewhat altered. There was a slight reduction in astrocyte complexity (by 1.29%; Figure 1a) that was directly associated with a decrease in the number of processes and overall decrease in both surface (12.62%) and volume (14.25%; data not shown) of GFAP-labelled structures. Similar reduction in GFAP-labelled profiles was observed at all ages, although this decrease becomes significant only at 12 months of age. In 12-month-old animals the complexity was reduced by 5.04% (P=0.0105; Figure 1a, d and e), whereas GFAP-positive surface decreased by 38.99% and volume by 42.93% (P=0.0211, 0.0292, respectively; Figure 1). On a cellular level, this decrease in complexity was reflected by reduced number of main processes and their arborisation (Figure 1c).
Incidentally, the same decrease in astrocytes complexity was found in the postmortem brains of dementia patients. In this study,85 astroglial cells from neocortical area 11 were Golgi impregnated and their complexity was characterised by a fractal dimension. Astrocytes from adult and healthy aged participants had similar complexity, whereas astrocytes from patients with dementia showed significant decrease in fractal dimension, thus indicating the decreased complexity. Furthermore, the volume of the brain parenchima occupied by the processes of single astrocyte was smaller in demented brains.
At the very same time confocal images revealed that the specific population of astrocytes surrounding amyloid plaques display the typical reactive characteristics (Figure 2), showing thick processes and enlarged cell bodies. Some of these astrocytes closely associated with amyloid plaques showed β-amyloid accumulation, as revealed by specific antibodies (Figure 2b). Conversely, astrocytes positioned away from the plaques did not show β-amyloid burden, which is consistent with previous observations.54, 55
The 3xTg-AD animals show other changes that could be associated with glial malfunction. For example, we observed a transient increase in the number of asymmetric excitatory synapses in AD mice at 2 months of age, which subsequently dropped to control levels at 6–9 months. Nonetheless, this increase in excitatory synaptic contacts re-emerged again at 12 months of age when the brain parenchyma was infested with plaques, and neurones showed tangles.86 In addition, we also found significant decrease in the neurogenic capacity of 3x-Tg-AD mice at 12 months of age,87 which may reflect degenerative changes in ‘stem-cell’-like astrocytes.
Astroglial theory of AD?
The pivotal role of astroglia in various types of brain pathology is widely accepted.6, 88, 89 Nevertheless, the pathological potential of astrocytes in human dementias remains virtually unexplored. From the scarce data available in the literature, we may conclude that astrocytic reactions in various types of dementia can be manifold, ranging from proliferation and astrogliosis to apoptosis and dystrophy.
In AD, these two reactions develop in parallel and may represent the underlying mechanism for loss in synaptic connectivity and plasticity, which in turn determine cognitive deficits. The reaction of astrocytes to the AD progression is spatially distinct (Figure 3): astroglial cells surrounding the plaques undergo gliosis, whereas astrocytes distant from the amyloid deposits develop atrophy. The first signs of this atrophy appear early in the genetic form of AD pathology in mice; and these signs precede the formation of both plaques and tangles. It is then conceivable to speculate that dystrophic astrocytes fail to provide adequate support for synaptic contacts, which may lead to their remodelling (e.g., distorted balance between excitatory and inhibitory synapses), with ensuing disruption of neuronal circuitry – and indeed the synaptic loss is observed in early stages of AD when brain parenchyma remains relatively free from neuritic plaques.90, 91 Furthermore, reduced astroglial coverage may significantly affect extracellular brain homoeostasis. In particular, dystrophic astrocytes may have reduced ability for glutamate uptake, thus increasing the overall brain vulnerability to glutamate excitotoxicity. In contrast, the reactive astroglial cells may serve another function – the function of neuronal killers. Indeed, the main pillar of β-amyloid hypothesis of AD, the toxicity of the neuritic plaques has been considerably shaken by experiments on transgenic animals. The latter, despite acquiring a heavy burden of amyloid plaques, show very little (if any) neuronal death.58 This discrepancy is fundamental, as massive neuronal death assumes the main role in the development of severe dementia in humans. Naturally, the absence of neuronal extinction in the animal model can be explained by a variety of reasons, yet it may also hint that alternative mechanisms of the neurodegenerative process are in operation. These mechanisms could be associated with both astroglial atrophy (reduced glutamate uptake with increased glutamate excitotoxicity) and astrogliosis, as reactive astrocytes and activated microglia may secrete numerous death-promoting molecules.
The AD, as well as other types of dementia, are complex processes which engulf all cellular elements in the brain. Can astrocytes assume the central stage in these pathologies? This question requires further detailed and insightful investigation.
Abbreviations
- 3xTg-AD:
-
triple-transgenic mice model of AD
- AD:
-
Alzheimer's disease
- APP:
-
Amyloid precursor protein
- APP/ApoE-KO:
-
Double-transgenic mice overexpressing a human mutated form of APP (APPV717F) in combination with ApoE gene knockout
- APP751SL:
-
Single-transgenic mice expressing APP mutation APP Ser751 to Leu
- APP751SL/PS1M146L:
-
Double-transgenic mice expressing APP751SL and PS1M146L
- APPSWE:
-
Single-transgenic mice expressing the ‘Swedish’ APP double-point mutations Lys670 to Asn and Met671 to Leu
- APPSWE/PS1dE9:
-
Double-transgenic mice expressing APPswe and PS1dE9
- CNS:
-
central nervous system
- FAD:
-
Familial form of Alzheimer's disease
- GFAP:
-
glial fibrillary acidic protein
- HAD:
-
HIV-1-associated dementia
- nAChR:
-
nicotinic cholinoreceptor
- nbm:
-
nucleus basalis magnocellularis
- PDAPP:
-
Single-transgenic mice expressing the ‘Swedish’ and ‘Indiana’ APP mutations Asp664 to Ala (PDAPP(D664A)
- PS1:
-
Preseniline 1
- PS1dE9:
-
Single-transgenic mice (line S-9) expressing human PS1 carrying the exon 9-deleted variant associated with FAD
- PS1M146L:
-
Single-transgenic mice expressing PS1 mutation Met146 to Leu
- TauP301L:
-
Single-transgenic mice expressing the Pro301 to Leu tau mutation (P301L)
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Acknowledgements
We thank the National Institute of Health, INTAS, Alzheimer Research Trust UK and European commission for the grant support. AC research was supported by the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic (nos. 305/06/1316, 305/06/1464, 305/08/1384 and 309/08/1381), by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic (nos. 1M0538 and LC554) and by the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic (no. AVOZ50390512).
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Rodríguez, J., Olabarria, M., Chvatal, A. et al. Astroglia in dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Cell Death Differ 16, 378–385 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2008.172
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2008.172
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