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Blocking microglial activation of reactive astrocytes is neuroprotective in models of Alzheimer's disease.

Acta Neuropathol Commun · 2021

Last updated 2026-05-28

In Alzheimer's disease mouse models, the GLP-1 drug NLY01 blocked harmful brain cell activation by preventing microglia from converting resting astrocytes into reactive ones. This treatment preserved neurons and improved the mice's ability to learn and remember spatial tasks. The effects were linked to NLY01's action on a specific brain cell pathway involving GLP-1 receptors.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalActa Neuropathol Commun, 2021
Citations148
Relative citation ratio10.57
NIH percentile98
Molecules
Conditions studied Alzheimers

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common cause of age-related dementia. Increasing evidence suggests that neuroinflammation mediated by microglia and astrocytes contributes to disease progression and severity in AD and other neurodegenerative disorders. During AD progression, resident microglia undergo proinflammatory activation, resulting in an increased capacity to convert resting astrocytes to reactive astrocytes. Therefore, microglia are a major therapeutic target for AD and blocking microglia-astrocyte activation could limit neurodegeneration in AD. Here we report that NLY01, an engineered exedin-4, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist, selectively blocks β-amyloid (Aβ)-induced activation of microglia through GLP-1R activation and inhibits the formation of reactive astrocytes as well as preserves neurons in AD models. In two transgenic AD mouse models (5xFAD and 3xTg-AD), repeated subcutaneous administration of NLY01 blocked microglia-mediated reactive astrocyte conversion and preserved neuronal viability, resulting in improved spatial learning and memory. Our study indicates that the GLP-1 pathway plays a critical role in microglia-reactive astrocyte associated neuroinflammation in AD and the effects of NLY01 are primarily mediated through a direct action on Aβ-induced GLP-1R microglia, contributing to the inhibition of astrocyte reactivity. These results show that targeting upregulated GLP-1R in microglia is a viable therapy for AD and other neurodegenerative disorders.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 33902708 ↗