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Home Science News Cancer

In Alzheimer’s Disease, Brain Immune Cells Accumulate Cancer-Linked Mutations

April 21, 2026
in Cancer
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In Alzheimer’s Disease, Brain Immune Cells Accumulate Cancer Linked Mutations
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New Study Uncovers Cancer-Linked Mutations in Brain Immune Cells Driving Alzheimer’s Disease

Emerging research from the esteemed Boston Children’s Hospital offers groundbreaking insights into the molecular underpinnings of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), revealing a surprising intersection between neurodegeneration and cancer biology. Published recently in Cell, the study, led by Dr. Christopher Walsh and his colleagues, sheds light on how somatic mutations typically associated with cancer are accumulated by microglia—the brain’s resident immune cells—and how these aberrations potentially instigate chronic inflammation, exacerbating neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s.

Aging tissues routinely acquire numerous genetic mutations as part of their natural lifecycle. However, this study highlights that microglia uniquely harbor mutations in a select group of cancer-driving genes, distinguishing them from other brain cells. Unlike malignant tumors, these mutated microglia do not form cancers but rather adopt dysfunctional behaviors. The result is a shift toward inflammatory and proliferative states which create a toxic microenvironment within the brain, accelerating the loss of vulnerable neurons characteristic of AD.

Walsh’s team undertook a meticulous genetic sequencing effort, analyzing 149 genes implicated in cancer from brain tissues of 190 Alzheimer’s patients versus 121 age-matched controls. Remarkably, microglia within AD brains exhibited an increased burden of single-nucleotide variants especially concentrated in five principal oncogenic drivers. This clonal expansion suggests selective survival and proliferation pressures acting on microglia harboring these mutations, which may alter their physiology and exacerbate neuroinflammation.

Microglia serve as vital guardians of cerebral homeostasis, functioning to clear cellular debris, pathogens, and apoptotic cells. Historically, these cells were understood to be strictly confined within the central nervous system by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which prohibits peripheral immune cells from infiltrating neural tissue. Intriguingly, the cancer-associated mutations identified are commonly found in hematological malignancies such as lymphoma and leukemia—prompting further inquiry into their origin.

To dissect this phenomenon, the research team explored the presence of identical cancer-driving mutations in blood samples of AD patients. To their surprise, peripheral blood leukocytes bore the same mutations found in the microglia-like cells of the brain. This finding upends the dogma of the BBB’s impermeability in aging or diseased brains, suggesting that mutated blood-derived immune cells might be breaching the barrier and colonizing the brain.

The proposed model postulates that age-related deterioration or injury compromises the integrity of the BBB, allowing peripheral immune cells with oncogenic mutations to transmigrate into the brain parenchyma. Once inside, these infiltrating cells differentiate into microglia-like cells. The hostile brain environment, riddled with pathological protein aggregates such as amyloid-beta plaques and tau tangles, induces a proliferation of microglia. Cells harboring advantageous mutations outcompete their normal counterparts, perpetuating a cycle of increased neuroinflammation and neuronal damage.

This paradigm not only highlights a novel pathophysiological mechanism underlying Alzheimer’s but also opens promising therapeutic avenues. Given that many anti-cancer drugs target the signaling pathways activated by these mutations, repurposing such agents may modulate microglial activity and restrain neuroinflammation in AD. Walsh emphasizes that understanding these commonalities between cancer and Alzheimer’s could accelerate drug development efforts utilizing the extensive oncology pharmacopeia.

Moreover, the study paves the way for new diagnostic strategies. Since obtaining brain tissue from living patients remains impractical, identifying cancer-associated mutations in circulating blood cells might serve as a minimally invasive biomarker for AD risk assessment. Dr. Alice Eunjung Lee suggests that blood-based genetic screening could revolutionize early detection and enable targeted interventions before irreversible neuronal loss occurs.

Extending these findings, a subsequent preprint by Lee and August Yue Huang, also from Boston Children’s Hospital, delves into how these somatic cancer mutations independently elevate Alzheimer’s disease risk beyond traditional genetic factors like APOE4, a well-known AD susceptibility allele. Their research confirms that these mutations contribute a distinct molecular signature implicating somatic mosaicism in disease progression.

Collaboration with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai enriched the study’s scope, while funding from prestigious institutions such as the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the NIH’s National Institute on Aging, and the NIH Common Fund’s Somatic Mosaicism Across Human Tissues (SMaHT) consortium underscored the project’s significance. Support was also contributed by the Suh Kyungbae Foundation, highlighting the global interest in unraveling AD’s complex pathobiology.

The implications of this work extend beyond Alzheimer’s disease, potentially transforming our understanding of neuroimmune interactions and somatic mutation-driven pathologies in the brain. Future research might explore the roles of mutated immune cells in other neurodegenerative or neuroinflammatory conditions, offering a new conceptual framework for cell lineage plasticity and tissue-specific disease susceptibility.

In summary, this study unexpectedly bridges oncology and neuroscience by demonstrating that cancer-driving somatic mutations in microglia-like cells promote inflammatory states that exacerbate neuron loss in Alzheimer’s disease. It further implicates peripheral blood-derived immune cells as potential contributors to central nervous system disease, rewriting foundational paradigms about immune cell origin and blood-brain barrier integrity in aged brains. This enhanced understanding holds promise for innovative diagnostics and therapeutics, creating a hopeful horizon for combating one of the most devastating neurodegenerative disorders.

Subject of Research: Alzheimer’s disease and brain immune cell mutations
Article Title: Somatic cancer variants enriched in Alzheimer’s disease microglia-like cells drive inflammatory and proliferative states
News Publication Date: 21-Apr-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2026.03.040
References: BioRxiv preprint on cancer driver mutations and Alzheimer’s risk: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.05.19.654981v1
Image Credits: Christopher Walsh and colleagues at Boston Children’s Hospital
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease, microglia, somatic mutations, cancer driver genes, neuroinflammation, blood-brain barrier, blood cancer, hematopoiesis, neurodegenerative diseases

Tags: Alzheimer's disease microglia mutationsbrain immune cell genetic alterationscancer-driving genes in Alzheimer's microgliacancer-linked somatic mutations in braingenetic sequencing in Alzheimer's researchinflammation-induced neuronal loss in Alzheimer'smicroglia-driven chronic brain inflammationmicroglial dysfunction in neurodegenerative diseasesmolecular mechanisms of Alzheimer’s diseaseneurodegeneration and cancer biology connectiononcogenic mutations in brain immune cellssomatic mutations in aging brain cells
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