Microscopic view of astrocytes clearing Alzheimer's amyloid plaques in a mouse brain, boosted by Sox9 protein.
Microscopic view of astrocytes clearing Alzheimer's amyloid plaques in a mouse brain, boosted by Sox9 protein.
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Boosting Sox9 protein helps astrocytes clear Alzheimer’s plaques in mice

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Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine report that raising levels of the protein Sox9 in astrocytes enables these brain support cells to remove existing amyloid plaques and preserve cognitive performance in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease that already show memory deficits. The findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, highlight astrocytes as a potential target for slowing neurodegenerative decline.

In a study reported in Nature Neuroscience, scientists examined how astrocytes — star-shaped support cells in the brain — change with age and contribute to Alzheimer’s disease.

The team focused on Sox9, a protein that influences a wide network of genes involved in astrocyte aging and function, according to materials released by Baylor College of Medicine via ScienceDaily. Researchers manipulated Sox9 expression to assess its impact on amyloid plaque clearance and brain function in mouse models.

The experiments used Alzheimer’s mouse models that had already developed cognitive impairments, such as memory deficits, and had amyloid plaques in the brain — a design the authors argue is more relevant to symptomatic human patients than models treated before plaques form. In these animals, the researchers either increased or removed Sox9 and then monitored each mouse’s cognitive performance for six months. During this period, the mice were tested on their ability to recognize familiar objects and locations. After the behavioral testing, the team examined brain tissue to measure plaque accumulation.

The results showed a clear divergence depending on Sox9 levels. Lowering Sox9 accelerated plaque buildup, reduced the structural complexity of astrocytes and diminished their plaque-clearing capacity. Raising Sox9 had the opposite effect, increasing astrocyte activity, promoting plaque removal and preserving cognitive performance over the six-month observation period.

"We found that increasing Sox9 expression triggered astrocytes to ingest more amyloid plaques, clearing them from the brain like a vacuum cleaner," said corresponding author Dr. Benjamin Deneen, a professor in the Department of Neurosurgery at Baylor and director of the Center for Cancer Neuroscience. First author Dr. Dong-Joo Choi noted that astrocytes carry out diverse and essential functions, including supporting brain communication and memory storage, yet how age-related changes in these cells shape neurodegeneration is still not well understood.

The findings suggest that enhancing astrocytes’ natural ability to remove amyloid deposits could complement existing neuron-focused approaches to Alzheimer’s therapy. However, the investigators caution that additional research is needed to understand how Sox9 behaves in the human brain over time and to determine whether similar strategies could be translated into safe and effective treatments.

The work, led by scientists at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital, involved multiple collaborators and was supported in part by grants from the U.S. National Institutes of Health and philanthropic foundations, according to the Baylor release.

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Reactions on X to the Baylor College of Medicine study are predominantly positive and neutral, focusing on Sox9 overexpression in astrocytes clearing amyloid plaques and preserving cognitive function in Alzheimer's mouse models. Scientists, biotech news, and enthusiasts highlight its therapeutic potential for neurodegenerative diseases, with discussions in English, Spanish, and Japanese.

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Illustration of a scientist studying a mouse brain model on a screen, highlighting astrocyte mitochondrial free radicals linked to dementia research.
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Astrocyte mitochondrial free radicals tied to dementia pathology in mice

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Weill Cornell Medicine researchers report that free radicals generated at a specific mitochondrial site in astrocytes appear to promote neuroinflammation and neuronal injury in mouse models. Blocking those radicals with tailored compounds curbed inflammation and protected neurons. The findings, published Nov. 4, 2025, in Nature Metabolism, point to a targeted approach that could inform therapies for Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia.

Astrocytes—star-shaped glial cells long cast mainly as support staff for neurons—appear to actively shape how fear memories are learned, recalled and weakened, according to a mouse study published in Nature. The work suggests these cells help sustain the neural activity patterns that underlie fear expression, a finding that researchers say could eventually inform new approaches to anxiety-related disorders.

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Researchers at UCLA Health and UC San Francisco have identified a natural defense mechanism in brain cells that helps remove toxic tau protein, potentially explaining why some neurons resist Alzheimer's damage better than others. The study, published in Cell, used CRISPR screening on lab-grown human neurons to uncover this system. Findings suggest new therapeutic avenues for neurodegenerative diseases.

A study published November 5 in Nature reports that a small subset of microglia marked by low PU.1 and expression of the receptor CD28 can dampen neuroinflammation and curb amyloid pathology in Alzheimer’s models, pointing to microglia-focused immunotherapy. The work draws on mouse experiments, human cells, and analyses of human brain tissue.

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Scientists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center report that a subset of astrocytes located away from a spinal cord injury can help drive repair in mice by releasing the protein CCN1, which alters microglia metabolism to improve cleanup of lipid-rich nerve debris. The work, published in Nature, also found evidence of a similar CCN1-linked response in human spinal cord tissue from people with multiple sclerosis.

Researchers at Osaka Metropolitan University report that while the Alzheimer’s drug lecanemab reduces amyloid plaques, MRI measures found no improvement in the brain’s glymphatic waste-clearance three months after treatment began, underscoring the disease’s complexity and the need for multi-target approaches.

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Washington University scientists report that inhibiting the circadian regulator REV-ERBα raised brain NAD+ and reduced tau pathology in mouse models, pointing to a clock-focused strategy worth exploring for Alzheimer’s disease.

 

 

 

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