For Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a range of pathological, genetic and biomarker data supports the
hypothesis that Amyloid beta (Aß) peptide triggers the disease process. As AD progresses over decades,
subsequent Tau pathology and inflammatory reaction occur during progressive cognitive decline to dementia
and death. Symptoms are tightly linked to the loss of neuronal synapses in the brain, but the mechanisms causing
synapses to be removed are less clear. Recent data implicate innate immunity, microglia cells and complement
proteins in synaptic engulfment. However, the molecular mechanism by which complement proteins accumulate
focally and tag specific synapses for removal in AD remains unknown. In addition, the misfolded aggregated
peptides, Aß and Tau, are known to interact with synapses and cause dysfunction. We hypothesize that the
tagging of synapses with microglia-derived complement components for subsequent engulfment is coupled with
synapse-specific derangements driven by neuronal interaction with misfolded protein accumulation.
We will examine the connection between synaptic damage signals and complement recruitment.
Preliminary studies show that interruption of synaptic signaling by PrPC or mGluR5 prevents both C1q tagging
and loss of synapses in AD mice, despite persistent microgliosis and complement overproduction. We will
examine the specificity, timing and genetic necessity of a link between complement and the Aßo/PrPC/mGluR5
complex for synapse tagging and engulfment. Mechanistically, we find that C1q and C1qBP physically associate
with hydrogels composed of Aßo/PrPC/mGluR5, and this may provide a direct means for C1q selectivity. We will
test this possibility by biochemical and cellular analysis, and by genetic studies in mice. Alternatively, synaptic
signaling triggered by Aß or Tau may regulate other molecules, which in turn recruit C1q. An arrayed expression
cloning screen for C1q binding sites revealed a novel high affinity neuronal protein binding C1q. We will test the
role of this binding site in C1q tagging of synapses, and in the loss of synapses in neurodegenerative and
developmental models.