Neuroinflammation: Cause, Consequence, or Therapeutic Target in Chronic Neurodegeneration — A Perspective
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.63501/s9t2yt51Keywords:
Neuroinflammation; microglia; astrocytes; inflammasome; TREM2; Alzheimer’s disease; therapeutic target; biomarkers; innate immunity; neurodegenerationAbstract
Neuroinflammation — the sustained activation of central nervous system (CNS) innate and adaptive immune responses — is increasingly recognized as a central, yet complex, component of chronic neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Huntington’s disease). Rather than being purely reactive, inflammatory processes can precede clinical symptoms, interact bidirectionally with disease-specific proteinopathies, and alter disease trajectories. This Perspective synthesizes mechanistic and translational evidence supporting three non-mutually exclusive roles for neuroinflammation: (1) an upstream contributor to disease initiation; (2) an amplifier/consequence of ongoing neurodegeneration; and (3) a mutable therapeutic target whose success depends on timing, cellular specificity and patient stratification. We highlight key molecular mediators (inflammasomes, microglial and astrocytic phenotypes, innate immune receptors such as TREM2), summarize advances in imaging and fluid biomarkers, and propose a pragmatic roadmap for translating immunomodulatory strategies — from precision biomarker-guided trials to combinatorial therapies that preserve beneficial immune functions while limiting chronic toxicity.
References
References:
Heppner FL, Ransohoff RM, Becher B. Immune attack: the role of inflammation in Alzheimer disease. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2015;16(6):358–372.
Heneka MT, Kummer MP, Latz E. Innate immunity and neuroinflammation in Alzheimer’s disease. Nat Immunol. 2015;16(3):229–236. (See also Heneka MT et al., NLRP3 activation studies.)
Liddelow SA, Guttenplan KA, Clarke LE, et al. Neurotoxic reactive astrocytes are induced by activated microglia. Nature. 2017;541(7638):481–487.
Keren-Shaul H, Spinrad A, Weiner A, et al. A unique microglia type associated with restricting development of Alzheimer’s disease. Cell. 2017;169(7):1276–1290.e17.
Jonsson T, Stefansson H, Steinberg S, et al. Variant of TREM2 associated with the risk of Alzheimer’s disease. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(2):107–116.
Hansen DV, Hanson JE, Sheng M. Microglia in Alzheimer’s disease. J Cell Biol. 2018;217(2):459–472.
Van Eldik LJ, Carrillo MC, Cole PE, et al. The roles of inflammation and immune mechanisms in Alzheimer’s disease: a perspective for translational research. Alzheimers Dement (N Y). 2016;2(2):99–109.
Hickman S, Izzy S, Sen P, Morsett L, El Khoury J. Microglia in neurodegeneration. Nat Neurosci. 2018;21(10):1359–1369.
Venegas C, Heneka MT. Inflammasome-mediated innate immunity in Alzheimer’s disease. FASEB J. 2019;33(12):13075–13084.
Yeh FL, Hansen DV, Sheng M. TREM2, microglia, and neurodegenerative disease. Trends Mol Med. 2017;23(6):512–533.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution, and reproduction in any medium or format, provided appropriate credit is given to the author(s) and the source. To view a copy of this license, visit: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0