Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Spermidine reduces neuroinflammation and soluble amyloid beta in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model

Kiara Freitag, Nele Sterczyk, Sarah Wendlinger, Benedikt Obermayer, J Schulz, Vadim Farztdinov, Michael Mülleder, Markus Ralser, Judith Houtman, Lara Fleck, Caroline Braeuning, Roberto Sansevrino, Christian Hoffmann, Dragomir Milovanović, Stephan J. Sigrist

Journal of Neuroinflammation · 2022 · ▲ 105 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Deposition of amyloid beta (Aβ) and hyperphosphorylated tau along with glial cell-mediated neuroinflammation are prominent pathogenic hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD). In recent years, impairment of autophagy(definition) has been identified as another important feature contributing to AD progression. Therefore, the potential of the autophagy activator spermidine, a small body-endogenous polyamine often used as dietary supplement, was assessed on Aβ pathology and glial cell-mediated neuroinflammation. RESULTS: Oral treatment of the amyloid prone AD-like APPPS1 mice with spermidine reduced neurotoxic soluble Aβ and decreased AD-associated neuroinflammation. Mechanistically, single nuclei sequencing revealed AD-associated microglia to be the main target of spermidine. This microglia population was characterized by increased AXL levels and expression of genes implicated in cell migration and phagocytosis. A subsequent proteome analysis of isolated microglia confirmed the anti-inflammatory and cytoskeletal effects of spermidine in APPPS1 mice. In primary microglia and astrocytes, spermidine-induced autophagy subsequently affected TLR3- and TLR4-mediated inflammatory processes, phagocytosis of Aβ and motility. Interestingly, spermidine regulated the neuroinflammatory response of microglia beyond transcriptional control by interfering with the assembly of the inflammasome. CONCLUSIONS: Our data highlight that the autophagy activator spermidine holds the potential to enhance Aβ degradation and to counteract glia-mediated neuroinflammation in AD pathology.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1186/s12974-022-02534-7
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-16 MST

Cite this

APA
Freitag, K., Sterczyk, N., Wendlinger, S., Obermayer, B., Schulz, J., Farztdinov, V., Mülleder, M., Ralser, M., Houtman, J., Fleck, L., Braeuning, C., Sansevrino, R., Hoffmann, C., Milovanović, D., Sigrist, S.J., Conrad, T., Beule, D., Heppner, F.L., &amp; Jendrach, M. (2022). Spermidine reduces neuroinflammation and soluble amyloid beta in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model. <em>Journal of Neuroinflammation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-022-02534-7
Vancouver
Freitag K, Sterczyk N, Wendlinger S, Obermayer B, Schulz J, Farztdinov V, et al. Spermidine reduces neuroinflammation and soluble amyloid beta in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model. Journal of Neuroinflammation. 2022. doi:10.1186/s12974-022-02534-7.
BibTeX
@article{kiara2022Spermi, title = {Spermidine reduces neuroinflammation and soluble amyloid beta in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model}, author = {Kiara Freitag and Nele Sterczyk and Sarah Wendlinger and Benedikt Obermayer and J Schulz and Vadim Farztdinov and Michael Mülleder and Markus Ralser and Judith Houtman and Lara Fleck and Caroline Braeuning and Roberto Sansevrino and Christian Hoffmann and Dragomir Milovanović and Stephan J. Sigrist and Thomas Conrad and Dieter Beule and Frank L. Heppner and Marina Jendrach}, journal = {Journal of Neuroinflammation}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1186/s12974-022-02534-7}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings