AI Article Synopsis

  • Microglia develop acidic compartments, known as lysosomal synapses, to digest large amyloid-beta plaques through a process called digestive exophagy, utilizing exocytosed lysosomal enzymes.
  • Electron microscopy in 5xFAD mouse brains reveals that a lysosomal enzyme is secreted toward plaques, confirming this digestion mechanism.
  • The formation of these synapses is regulated by the PI3K-AKT pathway, and microglia can also exocytose small Aβ fibrils to target larger aggregates, potentially influencing the spread of amyloid-beta in Alzheimer's disease.

Article Abstract

How microglia digest Alzheimer's fibrillar amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaques that are too large to be phagocytosed is not well understood. Here, we show that primary microglial cells create acidic extracellular compartments, lysosomal synapses, on model plaques and digest them with exocytosed lysosomal enzymes. This mechanism, called digestive exophagy, is confirmed by electron microscopy in 5xFAD mouse brains, which shows that a lysosomal enzyme, acid phosphatase, is secreted toward the plaques in structures resembling lysosomal synapses. Signaling studies demonstrate that the PI3K-AKT pathway modulates the formation of lysosomal synapses, as inhibition of PI3K1β or AKT1/2 reduces both lysosome exocytosis and actin polymerization, both required for the formation of the compartments. Finally, we show that small fibrils of Aβ previously internalized and trafficked to lysosomes are exocytosed toward large Aβ aggregates by microglia. Thus, the release of lysosomal contents during digestive exophagy may also contribute to the spread and growth of fibrillar Aβ.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2024.115052DOI Listing

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