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Interleukin-12 signaling drives Alzheimer's disease pathology through disrupting neuronal and oligodendrocyte homeostasis

Authors

  • S. Schneeberger
  • S.J. Kim
  • M.N. Geesdorf
  • E. Friebel
  • P. Eede
  • M. Jendrach
  • A. Boltengagen
  • C. Braeuning
  • T. Ruhwedel
  • A.J. Hülsmeier
  • N. Gimber
  • M. Foerster
  • J. Obst
  • M. Andreadou
  • S. Mundt
  • J. Schmoranzer
  • S. Prokop
  • W. Kessler
  • T. Kuhlmann
  • W. Möbius
  • K.A. Nave
  • T. Hornemann
  • B. Becher
  • J.M. Edgar
  • N. Karaiskos
  • C. Kocks
  • N. Rajewsky
  • F.L. Heppner

Journal

  • Nature Aging

Citation

  • Nat Aging

Abstract

  • Neuroinflammation including interleukin (IL)-12/IL-23-signaling is central to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology. Inhibition of p40, a subunit of IL-12/IL-23, attenuates pathology in AD-like mice; however, its signaling mechanism and expression pattern remained elusive. Here we show that IL-12 receptors are predominantly expressed in neurons and oligodendrocytes in AD-like APPPS1 mice and in patients with AD, whereas IL-23 receptor transcripts are barely detectable. Consistently, deletion of the IL-12 receptor in neuroectodermal cells ameliorated AD pathology in APPPS1 mice, whereas removal of IL-23 receptors had no effect. Genetic ablation of IL-12 signaling alone reverted the loss of mature oligodendrocytes, restored myelin homeostasis, rescued the amyloid-β-dependent reduction of parvalbumin-positive interneurons and restored phagocytosis-related changes in microglia of APPPS1 mice. Furthermore, IL-12 protein expression was increased in human AD brains compared to healthy age-matched controls, and human oligodendrocyte-like cells responded profoundly to IL-12 stimulation. We conclude that oligodendroglial and neuronal IL-12 signaling, but not IL-23 signaling, are key in orchestrating AD-related neuroimmune crosstalk and that IL-12 represents an attractive therapeutic target in AD.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s43587-025-00816-2