Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health (Dec 2022)
Miltefosine as a PPM1A activator improves AD-like pathology in mice by alleviating tauopathy via microglia/neurons crosstalk
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressively neurodegenerative disease without effective treatment. Here, we reported that the levels of expression and enzymatic activity of phosphatase magnesium-dependent 1A (PPM1A) were both repressed in brains of AD patient postmortems and 3 × Tg-AD mice, and treatment of adeno-associated virus (AAV)-ePHP-overexpression (OE)-PPM1A for brain-specific PPM1A overexpression or the new discovered PPM1A activator Miltefosine (MF, FDA approved oral anti-leishmanial drug) for PPM1A enzymatic activation improved the AD-like pathology in 3 × Tg-AD mice. The mechanism was intensively investigated by assay against the 3 × Tg-AD mice with brain-specific PPM1A knockdown (KD) through AAV-ePHP-KD-PPM1A injection. MF alleviated neuronal tauopathy involving microglia/neurons crosstalk by both promoting microglial phagocytosis of tau oligomers via PPM1A/Nuclear factor-κb (NF-κB)/C-X3-C Motif Chemokine Receptor 1 (CX3CR1) signaling and inhibiting neuronal tau hyperphosphorylation via PPM1A/NLR Family Pyrin Domain Containing 3 (NLRP3)/tau axis. MF suppressed microglial NLRP3 inflammasome activation by both inhibiting NLRP3 transcription via PPM1A/NF-κB/NLRP3 pathway in priming step and promoting PPM1A binding to NLRP3 to interfere NLRP3 inflammasome assembly in assembly step. Our results have highly addressed that PPM1A activation shows promise as a therapeutic strategy for AD and highlighted the potential of MF in treating this disease.