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Sex-dependent APOE4 neutrophil-microglia interactions drive cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease.

Neta RosenzweigKilian L KleemannThomas RustMadison CarpenterMadeline GrucciMichael AronchikNieske BrouwerIsabel ValenbrederJoya Cooper-HohnMalvika IyerRajesh K KrishnanKisha N SivanathanWesley BrandãoTaha YahyaAna DuraoZhuoran YinJean Paul ChadarevianMichael J ProperziRoni NowarskiHayk DavtyanHoward L WeinerMathew Blurton JonesHyun-Sik YangBart J L EggenReisa A SperlingOleg Butovsky
Published in: Nature medicine (2024)
APOE4 is the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD), with increased odds ratios in female carriers. Targeting amyloid plaques shows modest improvement in male non-APOE4 carriers. Leveraging single-cell transcriptomics across APOE variants in both sexes, multiplex flow cytometry and validation in two independent cohorts of APOE4 female carriers with AD, we identify a new subset of neutrophils interacting with microglia associated with cognitive impairment. This phenotype is defined by increased interleukin (IL)-17 and IL-1 coexpressed gene modules in blood neutrophils and in microglia of cognitively impaired female APOE ε4 carriers, showing increased infiltration to the AD brain. APOE4 female IL-17 + neutrophils upregulated the immunosuppressive cytokines IL-10 and TGFβ and immune checkpoints, including LAG3 and PD-1, associated with accelerated immune aging. Deletion of APOE4 in neutrophils reduced this immunosuppressive phenotype and restored the microglial response to neurodegeneration, limiting plaque pathology in AD mice. Mechanistically, IL-17F upregulated in APOE4 neutrophils interacts with microglial IL-17RA to suppress the induction of the neurodegenerative phenotype, and blocking this axis supported cognitive improvement in AD mice. These findings provide a translational basis to target IL-17F in APOE ε4 female carriers with cognitive impairment.
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