With a rapidly aging global human population, finding a cure for late onset neurodegenerative
diseases has become an urgent enterprise. However, these efforts are hindered by the lack of
understanding of what constitutes the phenotype of aged human microglia—the cell type that
has been strongly implicated by genetic studies in the pathogenesis of age-related neurodegenerative
disease. Here, we establish the set of genes that is preferentially expressed by
microglia in the aged human brain. This HuMi_Aged gene set captures a unique phenotype,
which we confirm at the protein level. Furthermore, we find this gene set to be enriched in
susceptibility genes for Alzheimer’s disease and multiple sclerosis, to be increased with
advancing age, and to be reduced by the protective APOEe2 haplotype. APOEe4 has no effect.
These findings confirm the existence of an aging-related microglial phenotype in the aged
human brain and its involvement in the pathological processes associated with brain aging.
Revised: January 11, 2019 |
Published: February 7, 2018
Citation
Olah M., E. Patrick, A. Villani, J. Xu, C. White, K. Ryan, and P.D. Piehowski, et al. 2018.A transcriptomic atlas of aged human microglia.Nature Communications 9, no. 1:Article No. 539.PNNL-SA-134273.doi:10.1038/s41467-018-02926-5