Agent-based Modeling of Microglia Behavior in the Context of Alzheimer's Disease

POSTER

Abstract

Whether immune cells protect or harm the brain is an open question depending on context, and their role is implicated in multiple diseases such as Alzheimer's Disease, dementia, and other neurological disorders. Microglia, a specific type of immune cell in the central nervous system, play a key role in homeostasis, and genes associated with an elevated risk of Alzheimer's disease correspond with deficiencies in their behavior. We create an agent-based model that incorporates inflammatory signaling, chemotaxis, and phagocytosis of damaged neurons and allows the exploration of crucial pathways in the maintenance of brain health. We specifically investigated pathways related to Alzheimer's risk variants of the gene TREM2 which results in impaired microglia phagocytosis and sensing.

*All authors were supported by NSF grant 2245839 from the Division of Mathematical Sciences Mathematical Biology program and the Systems Biology program. They are deeply grateful for this support.

Publication: This model is published to the NetLogo User Community Models page and can be visited at the following link: https://ccl.northwestern.edu/netlogo/models/community/Microglia%20Model
A manuscript of this work is also under submission to the peer-reviewed journal Spora: A Journal in Biomathematics. It was submitted July, 2024.

Presenters

  • Abigail Penland

    • Cal Poly Humboldt

Authors

  • Abigail Penland

    • Cal Poly Humboldt
  • Cheyenne Ty

    • Cal Poly Humboldt
  • Amanda Case

    • Cal Poly Humboldt
  • Emmanuel Mezzulo

    • Cal Poly Humboldt
  • Kamila Larripa

    • Cal Poly Humboldt