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Volume 26 Issue 7, July 2023

B2M co-aggregates with Aβ

In this issue, Zhao et al. demonstrate a noncanonical role of B2M in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease. B2M is a key component of major histocompatibility complex class I (MHCI), which is crucial for host defense against pathogen infection. In addition to forming a complex, B2M can dissociate from MHCI. Secreted B2M can cross the blood–brain barrier and co-aggregate with β-amyloid in the brain. The image illustrates the two different sides of B2M–MHCI in the immune and nervous systems. In the immune system, B2M–MHCI (king at the top) prevents pathogen infection and safeguards our health (shield). However, in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease, secreted B2M (king at the bottom) can impair neuronal function.

See Zhao et al.

Image: Yan Yang, Xin Wang. Cover Design: Marina Corral Spence.

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  • Neuroscience research is affected by a substantial racial bias, but there are major challenges involved in minimizing this bias. Here we discuss these challenges and call for a global discussion that develops answers to these challenges and defines best practices for how researchers can better represent human diversity and work against medical racism. This global discussion should involve researchers from medicine, life sciences, social sciences, and humanities, as well as people with lived experience and health equity activists, to improve racial and ethnic equity in neuroscience research and beyond.

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  • Vasek et al. show that microglia perform protein translation in their processes and that this translation is important for the number of processes and formation of phagocytic cups. These findings may provide insight into how microglia respond rapidly to a wide variety of local signals in defined cellular compartments.

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  • β2-Microglobulin (β2M) is an amyloidogenic protein. β2M coaggregates with β-amyloid (Aβ) in the brains of patients with Alzheimer’s disease and enhances Aβ deposition. β2M is essential for Aβ neurotoxicity in vivo, and neutralization of pathogenetic β2M–Aβ aggregates ameliorates the amyloid pathology and cognitive deficits associated with disease in a mouse model.

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