New insights on the role of microglia in synaptic pruning in health and disease

S Hong, L Dissing-Olesen, B Stevens - Current opinion in neurobiology, 2016 - Elsevier
Current opinion in neurobiology, 2016Elsevier
Highlights•Recent GWAS identified microglia-related pathways as risk factors for
Alzheimer's.•Role of immune molecules in synapse loss, a hallmark of Alzheimer's, is poorly
understood.•Research in healthy CNS provides new insight into microglia's role in brain
wiring.•Microglia and immune-related proteins mediate synaptic pruning in developing
CNS.•Microglia–synapse dysfunction may contribute to synapse loss in early AD
brain.Recent genome-wide association studies implicate microglia in Alzheimer's disease …
Highlights
  • Recent GWAS identified microglia-related pathways as risk factors for Alzheimer's.
  • Role of immune molecules in synapse loss, a hallmark of Alzheimer's, is poorly understood.
  • Research in healthy CNS provides new insight into microglia's role in brain wiring.
  • Microglia and immune-related proteins mediate synaptic pruning in developing CNS.
  • Microglia–synapse dysfunction may contribute to synapse loss in early AD brain.
Recent genome-wide association studies implicate microglia in Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis; however, their biological significance remains poorly understood. Synapse loss is a significant correlate of cognitive decline that serves as a critical hallmark of AD and other neurodegenerative diseases; however, mechanisms underlying synaptic vulnerability remain elusive. Emerging research on microglia function in the healthy brain is providing new insight into fundamental roles of microglia and immune molecules in brain wiring. Among their many roles, microglia prune developing synapses and regulate synaptic plasticity and function. Here, we review and discuss how this emerging work may provide new insight into how disruptions in microglia–synapse interactions could contribute to synapse loss and dysfunction, and consequently cognitive impairment, in AD.
Elsevier