Helena C. Brigas,Miguel Ribeiro,Joana E. Coelho,Rui Gomes,Victoria Gómez-Murcia,Kévin Carvalho,Émilie Faivre,Sara Costa‐Pereira,Julie Darrigues,Afonso Antunes de Almeida,Luc Buée,Jade Dunot,Hélène Marie,Paula A. Pousinha,David Blum,Bruno Silva‐Santos,Luı́sa V. Lopes,Julie C. Ribot
Neuroinflammation in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related mouse models has been recognized for decades, but the contribution of the recently described meningeal immune population to AD pathogenesis remains to be addressed. Here, using the 3xTg-AD model, we report an accumulation of interleukin-17 (IL-17)-producing cells, mostly γδ T cells, in the brain and the meninges of female, but not male, mice, concomitant with the onset of cognitive decline. Critically, IL-17 neutralization into the ventricles is sufficient to prevent short-term memory and synaptic plasticity deficits at early stages of disease. These effects precede blood-brain barrier disruption and amyloid-beta or tau pathology, implying an early involvement of IL-17 in AD pathology. When IL-17 is neutralized at later stages of disease, the onset of short-memory deficits and amyloidosis-related splenomegaly is delayed. Altogether, our data support the idea that cognition relies on a finely regulated balance of "inflammatory" cytokines derived from the meningeal immune system.