Study reveals Alzheimer's synapse loss via shared molecular pathway

Researchers have uncovered how amyloid beta and inflammation may both trigger synapse pruning in Alzheimer's disease through a common receptor, potentially offering new treatment avenues. The findings challenge the notion that neurons are passive in this process, showing they actively erase their own connections. Led by Stanford's Carla Shatz, the study suggests targeting this receptor could preserve memory more effectively than current amyloid-focused drugs.

Alzheimer's disease progressively dismantles the brain's neural networks, leading to severe memory impairment. While amyloid beta buildup has long been implicated, other factors like chronic inflammation also play key roles. A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences bridges these ideas, showing that both amyloid beta and inflammation converge on the LilrB2 receptor to signal neurons to prune synapses—the junctions essential for communication between brain cells.

The research, spearheaded by Carla Shatz, the Sapp Family Provostial Professor at Stanford University, and first author Barbara Brott, builds on prior discoveries. In 2006, Shatz's team identified the mouse equivalent of LilrB2 as crucial for synaptic pruning during development and learning. By 2013, they demonstrated that amyloid beta binds to this receptor, prompting synapse removal, and that genetically eliminating it protected mice from memory deficits in an Alzheimer's model.

Extending this, the team explored the complement cascade, an immune response linked to excessive pruning in neurological disorders. Screening revealed that the protein fragment C4d binds strongly to LilrB2. When injected into healthy mice brains, C4d rapidly stripped synapses from neurons. "Lo and behold, it stripped synapses off neurons," Shatz remarked, noting the surprise since C4d was previously considered non-functional.

These results indicate a unified pathway for memory loss, with inflammation's molecules like C4d mimicking amyloid beta's effects. Importantly, the study shifts focus from glial cells to neurons themselves: "Neurons aren't innocent bystanders," Shatz emphasized. "They are active participants."

Current FDA-approved treatments target amyloid plaques but yield modest results alongside risks such as headaches and brain bleeding. Shatz argues that addressing LilrB2 directly might safeguard synapses and memory more comprehensively. "Busting up amyloid plaques hasn't worked that well... you're only going to solve part of the problem."

Funded partly by the National Institutes of Health and the Knight Initiative for Brain Resilience, the work involved collaborators from Stanford and the California Institute of Technology, using human Alzheimer's tissue from the University of California, San Francisco's brain bank.

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A scientist in a lab analyzing brain cell images on a computer, illustrating research on neuroprotective microglia in Alzheimer's disease.
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Scientists identify a neuroprotective microglia subtype in Alzheimer’s

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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.

Researchers at Sweden’s Karolinska Institutet and Japan’s RIKEN Center for Brain Science report that two somatostatin receptors, SST1 and SST4, jointly regulate levels of neprilysin—an enzyme that breaks down amyloid-beta—in the hippocampus. In mouse models, activating the receptors raised neprilysin, reduced amyloid-beta buildup and improved memory-related behavior, the team said.

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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.

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.

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Researchers at Brazil’s Federal University of ABC report a simple copper-chelating molecule that reduced beta-amyloid–linked pathology and improved memory in rats. The compound showed no detectable toxicity in preclinical tests and, based on computer modeling, is predicted to cross the blood–brain barrier. The team is seeking industry partners for clinical development.

University of Michigan researchers using fruit flies report that changes in sugar metabolism can influence whether injured neurons and their axons deteriorate or persist. The work, published in *Molecular Metabolism*, describes a context-dependent response involving the proteins DLK and SARM1 that can briefly slow axon degeneration after injury, a finding the team says could inform future strategies for neurodegenerative disease research.

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Alzheimer's trials are shifting to a multi-target approach inspired by cancer research, even after failures with Novo Nordisk's semaglutide. Only two drugs, Eli Lilly's Kisunla and Eisai and Biogen's Leqembi, are widely approved to slow progression. This evolution treats the brain-wasting disease as a complex system, seeking new ways to halt it amid its global impact.

 

 

 

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