The Univeristy of Melbourne The Royal Melbourne Hopspital

A joint venture between The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital

Publication

Microglia rescue neurons from aggregate-induced neuronal dysfunction and death through tunneling nanotubes


Authors:

  • Scheiblich, Hannah
  • Eikens, Frederik
  • Wischhof, Lena
  • Opitz, Sabine
  • Jüngling, Kay
  • Cserép, Csaba
  • Schmidt, Susanne V.
  • Lambertz, Jessica
  • Bellande, Tracy
  • Pósfai, Balázs
  • Geck, Charlotte
  • Spitzer, Jasper
  • Odainic, Alexandru
  • Castro-Gomez, Sergio
  • Schwartz, Stephanie
  • Boussaad, Ibrahim
  • Krüger, Rejko
  • Glaab, Enrico
  • Di Monte, Donato A.
  • Bano, Daniele
  • Dénes, Ádám
  • Latz, Eike
  • Melki, Ronald
  • Pape, Hans-Christian
  • Heneka, Michael T.

Details:

Neuron, Volume 112, Issue 18, 2024-09-25

Article Link: Click here

Microglia are crucial for maintaining brain health and neuron function. Here, we report that microglia establish connections with neurons using tunneling nanotubes (TNTs) in both physiological and pathological conditions. These TNTs facilitate the rapid exchange of organelles, vesicles, and proteins. In neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease, toxic aggregates of alpha-synuclein (α-syn) and tau accumulate within neurons. Our research demonstrates that microglia use TNTs to extract neurons from these aggregates, restoring neuronal health. Additionally, microglia share their healthy mitochondria with burdened neurons, reducing oxidative stress and normalizing gene expression. Disrupting mitochondrial function with antimycin A before TNT formation eliminates this neuroprotection. Moreover, co-culturing neurons with microglia and promoting TNT formation rescues suppressed neuronal activity caused by α-syn or tau aggregates. Notably, TNT-mediated aggregate transfer is compromised in microglia carrying L rrk2 2 ( Gly2019Ser ) or T rem 2(T66M ) and (R47H ) mutations, suggesting a role in the pathology of these gene variants in neurodegenerative diseases.