JAX research provides insight into the role of the
western diet in Alzheimer’s disease
Newswise, March 18, 2016 — Recent research has established
associations between certain environmental factors, including eating a western
diet and being sedentary, with an increased susceptibility to Alzheimer’s
disease.
In fact, it is estimated that a combination of diet and
inactivity contributes to as many as 25% of Alzheimer’s cases. Nonetheless,
little is known about the exact disease mechanisms and how or why this
increasingly common middle-age lifestyle can play such a big role in subsequent
cognitive function.
In a paper published online in Nature Scientific Reports,
researchers led by Tufts University/The Jackson Laboratory (JAX) Ph.D. student
Leah Graham and JAX Assistant Professor Gareth Howell, Ph.D., took a closer
look at connections between diet and Alzheimer’s disease susceptibility.
They used a “western diet” chow for mice developed by HHMI
Professor Simon John, Ph.D., and members of his lab, that combines high amounts
of animal products, fat and sugars with low plant-based content and nutrient
density.
Previous studies had focused on specific components of the
western diet, but it may be that the combination is important. Graham et al fed
the chow to healthy mice of a commonly used inbred strain (C57BL/6J) and to
mice that model some aspects of Alzheimer’s disease (APP/PS1) for eight months
(from two to 10 months of age, about the equivalent of late adolescence to
early middle age in humans).
What the researchers found was that prolonged consumption of
the western diet chow led to a dramatic increase in immune response activity in
the brains of all mice, including those that don’t model Alzheimer’s disease.
The diet greatly increased the activity of microglia, which
function as the brain’s immune cells, and monocytes, circulating white blood
cells that may cross into the brain in response to immune signaling.
Some components of the western diet have been associated with
the development of peripheral inflammation over time, and the study’s findings
strengthen the possibility that immune activity in the brain increases
Alzheimer’s disease susceptibility.
All mice also had a significant increase of
microglia/monocytes that express TREM2, a key immune regulatory protein. TREM2
has been strongly linked with susceptibility to Alzheimer’s disease and other
age-related neurodegenerative diseases, but this is the first study to show an
increase in TREM2+ cells in response to prolonged consumption of a western
diet.
Further, there was a strong correlation between increased
TREM2+ cell numbers and increased beta-amyloid plaque burden in the brains of
the mice, indicating that targeting TREM2 may be beneficial for patients with
diet-induced cognitive decline.
Graham, L. C. et al. Chronic consumption of a
western diet induces robust glial activation in aging mice and in a mouse model
of Alzheimer’s disease. Sci. Rep. 6, 21568; doi: 10.1038/srep21568 (2016).
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