髓系细胞耗竭可抑制缺血性视网膜病变中内层血液-视网膜屏障的破坏和致病性 Müller 胶质的激活。

IF 9.3 1区 医学 Q1 IMMUNOLOGY Journal of Neuroinflammation Pub Date : 2024-08-24 DOI:10.1186/s12974-024-03190-9
Lingli Zhou, Zhenhua Xu, Haining Lu, Hongkwan Cho, Yangyiran Xie, Grace Lee, Kaoru Ri, Elia J Duh
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引用次数: 0

摘要

缺血性视网膜病变(包括糖尿病视网膜病变)是视力丧失的主要原因。内层视网膜血屏障(BRB)的破坏和视网膜血管的高渗透性导致黄斑水肿。虽然包括神经元、胶质细胞和血管细胞在内的神经-血管单元的功能障碍现已被理解为这一过程的基础,但仍需要更全面地阐明缺血性疾病中BRB功能障碍的基本事件,包括对髓细胞的系统分析和对细胞交叉对话的探索。我们在视网膜缺血再灌注(IR)模型中使用了CSF-1R抑制剂PLX5622(PLX)消耗小胶质细胞的方法。在非 IR 条件下,PLX 治疗成功地消耗了视网膜中的小胶质细胞。PLX抑制了IR后的小胶质细胞活化反应以及单核巨噬细胞的浸润。这与视网膜上趋化因子(包括 CCL2 和炎症粘附分子 ICAM-1)的表达减少有关。此外,随着 IL-1b、IL-6、Ptgs2、TNF-a 和 Angpt2(一种调节 BRB 通透性的蛋白质)表达的减少,视网膜神经炎症也得到了明显抑制。PLX治疗能明显抑制红外损伤后内部BRB的破坏,但对神经元功能障碍没有明显影响。使用 Ribotag 方法对体内 Müller 神经胶质特异性基因表达进行的转化分析表明,PLX 治疗后,多种促炎基因的 Müller 细胞表达受到强烈抑制。对 Müller 细胞和小胶质细胞的共培养研究表明,活化的小胶质细胞会直接上调 Müller 细胞对这些炎症基因的表达,这表明 Müller 细胞是视网膜 IR 中髓细胞的下游效应器。这两种细胞类型与内皮细胞的共培养研究表明,活化的小胶质细胞和Müller细胞都能损害EC屏障功能。有趣的是,在这种共培养系统中,静止的 Müller 细胞能增强视网膜血管屏障功能。这些研究结果表明,在缺血相关疾病的情况下,髓系细胞在内部BRB破坏中起着关键作用,并表明髓系细胞通过直接和间接作用在iBRB失调中起着重要作用,而Müller胶质细胞则参与放大髓系细胞的神经炎症效应。
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Suppression of inner blood-retinal barrier breakdown and pathogenic Müller glia activation in ischemia retinopathy by myeloid cell depletion.

Ischemic retinopathies including diabetic retinopathy are major causes of vision loss. Inner blood-retinal barrier (BRB) breakdown with retinal vascular hyperpermeability results in macular edema. Although dysfunction of the neurovascular unit including neurons, glia, and vascular cells is now understood to underlie this process, there is a need for fuller elucidation of the underlying events in BRB dysfunction in ischemic disease, including a systematic analysis of myeloid cells and exploration of cellular cross-talk. We used an approach for microglia depletion with the CSF-1R inhibitor PLX5622 (PLX) in the retinal ischemia-reperfusion (IR) model. Under non-IR conditions, PLX treatment successfully depleted microglia in the retina. PLX suppressed the microglial activation response following IR as well as infiltration of monocyte-derived macrophages. This occurred in association with reduction of retinal expression of chemokines including CCL2 and the inflammatory adhesion molecule ICAM-1. In addition, there was a marked suppression of retinal neuroinflammation with reduction in expression of IL-1b, IL-6, Ptgs2, TNF-a, and Angpt2, a protein that regulates BRB permeability. PLX treatment significantly suppressed inner BRB breakdown following IR, without an appreciable effect on neuronal dysfunction. A translatomic analysis of Müller glial-specific gene expression in vivo using the Ribotag approach demonstrated a strong suppression of Müller cell expression of multiple pro-inflammatory genes following PLX treatment. Co-culture studies of Müller cells and microglia demonstrated that activated microglia directly upregulates Müller cell-expression of these inflammatory genes, indicating Müller cells as a downstream effector of myeloid cells in retinal IR. Co-culture studies of these two cell types with endothelial cells demonstrated the ability of both activated microglia and Müller cells to compromise EC barrier function. Interestingly, quiescent Müller cells enhanced EC barrier function in this co-culture system. Together this demonstrates a pivotal role for myeloid cells in inner BRB breakdown in the setting of ischemia-associated disease and indicates that myeloid cells play a major role in iBRB dysregulation, through direct and indirect effects, while Müller glia participate in amplifying the neuroinflammatory effect of myeloid cells.

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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroinflammation
Journal of Neuroinflammation 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
15.90
自引率
3.20%
发文量
276
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neuroinflammation is a peer-reviewed, open access publication that emphasizes the interaction between the immune system, particularly the innate immune system, and the nervous system. It covers various aspects, including the involvement of CNS immune mediators like microglia and astrocytes, the cytokines and chemokines they produce, and the influence of peripheral neuro-immune interactions, T cells, monocytes, complement proteins, acute phase proteins, oxidative injury, and related molecular processes. Neuroinflammation is a rapidly expanding field that has significantly enhanced our knowledge of chronic neurological diseases. It attracts researchers from diverse disciplines such as pathology, biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, clinical medicine, and epidemiology. Substantial contributions to this field have been made through studies involving populations, patients, postmortem tissues, animal models, and in vitro systems. The Journal of Neuroinflammation consolidates research that centers around common pathogenic processes. It serves as a platform for integrative reviews and commentaries in this field.
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