The extracellular ATP/P2X7R signaling axis drives early neuroinflammation and neuronal hyperexcitability in an Alzheimer’s disease mouse model

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Abstract

Neuroinflammation and synaptic dysfunction are emerging as early and potentially causative events in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), yet their molecular triggers remain elusive. Here, we identify extracellular ATP (eATP), a major damage-associated molecular pattern, and its purinergic receptor P2X7 (P2X7R) as pivotal drivers of early pathology in AD mice. In vivo bioluminescence imaging revealed a significant cortical accumulation of eATP in AD mice as early as 2 months of age—before amyloid plaque deposition and cognitive impairment. This increase is associated with inflammasome activation, pro-inflammatory cytokine production, microglia reactivity, aberrant synaptic pruning and perineuronal net degradation. Strikingly, genetic deletion of P2X7R rescues these alterations. Two-photon calcium imaging further demonstrates that P2X7R knockout counteracts AD-related neuronal hyperactivity. These findings set the eATP–P2X7R signaling axis as an early driver of AD pathology, linking neuroinflammation to synaptic remodeling and circuit dysfunction, and suggest P2X7R inhibition as a compelling strategy to counteract AD progression.

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