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Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke

Cerebral ischemia triggers a powerful inflammatory reaction involving both peripheral leukocytes and brain resident cells. Recent evidence indicates that their differentiation into a variety of functional phenotypes contributes to both tissue injury and repair. However, the temporal dynamics and div...

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Autores principales: Garcia-Bonilla, Lidia, Shahanoor, Ziasmin, Sciortino, Rose, Nazarzoda, Omina, Racchumi, Gianfranco, Iadecola, Costantino, Anrather, Josef
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10103945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37066298
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.31.535150
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author Garcia-Bonilla, Lidia
Shahanoor, Ziasmin
Sciortino, Rose
Nazarzoda, Omina
Racchumi, Gianfranco
Iadecola, Costantino
Anrather, Josef
author_facet Garcia-Bonilla, Lidia
Shahanoor, Ziasmin
Sciortino, Rose
Nazarzoda, Omina
Racchumi, Gianfranco
Iadecola, Costantino
Anrather, Josef
author_sort Garcia-Bonilla, Lidia
collection PubMed
description Cerebral ischemia triggers a powerful inflammatory reaction involving both peripheral leukocytes and brain resident cells. Recent evidence indicates that their differentiation into a variety of functional phenotypes contributes to both tissue injury and repair. However, the temporal dynamics and diversity of post-stroke immune cell subsets remain poorly understood. To address these limitations, we performed a longitudinal single-cell transcriptomic study of both brain and mouse blood to obtain a composite picture of brain-infiltrating leukocytes, circulating leukocytes, microglia and endothelium diversity over the ischemic/reperfusion time. Brain cells and blood leukocytes isolated from mice 2 or 14 days after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion or sham surgery were purified by FACS sorting and processed for droplet-based single-cell transcriptomics. The analysis revealed a strong divergence of post-ischemic microglia, macrophages, and neutrophils over time, while such diversity was less evident in dendritic cells, B, T and NK cells. Conversely, brain endothelial cells and brain associated-macrophages showed altered transcriptomic signatures at 2 days post-stroke, but low divergence from sham at day 14. Pseudotime trajectory inference predicted the in-situ longitudinal progression of monocyte-derived macrophages from their blood precursors into day 2 and day 14 phenotypes, while microglia phenotypes at these two time points were not connected. In contrast to monocyte-derived macrophages, neutrophils were predicted to be continuously de-novo recruited from the blood. Brain single-cell transcriptomics from both female and male aged mice did not show major changes in respect to young mice, but aged and young brains differed in their immune cell composition. Furthermore, blood leukocyte analysis also revealed altered transcriptomes after stroke. However, brain-infiltrating leukocytes displayed higher transcriptomic divergence than their circulating counterparts, indicating that phenotypic diversification into cellular subsets occurs within the brain in the early and the recovery phase of ischemic stroke. In addition, this resource report contains a searchable database https://anratherlab.shinyapps.io/strokevis/ to allow user-friendly access to our data. The StrokeVis tool constitutes a comprehensive gene expression atlas that can be interrogated at the gene and cell type level to explore the transcriptional changes of endothelial and immune cell subsets from mouse brain and blood after stroke.
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spelling pubmed-101039452023-04-15 Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke Garcia-Bonilla, Lidia Shahanoor, Ziasmin Sciortino, Rose Nazarzoda, Omina Racchumi, Gianfranco Iadecola, Costantino Anrather, Josef bioRxiv Article Cerebral ischemia triggers a powerful inflammatory reaction involving both peripheral leukocytes and brain resident cells. Recent evidence indicates that their differentiation into a variety of functional phenotypes contributes to both tissue injury and repair. However, the temporal dynamics and diversity of post-stroke immune cell subsets remain poorly understood. To address these limitations, we performed a longitudinal single-cell transcriptomic study of both brain and mouse blood to obtain a composite picture of brain-infiltrating leukocytes, circulating leukocytes, microglia and endothelium diversity over the ischemic/reperfusion time. Brain cells and blood leukocytes isolated from mice 2 or 14 days after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion or sham surgery were purified by FACS sorting and processed for droplet-based single-cell transcriptomics. The analysis revealed a strong divergence of post-ischemic microglia, macrophages, and neutrophils over time, while such diversity was less evident in dendritic cells, B, T and NK cells. Conversely, brain endothelial cells and brain associated-macrophages showed altered transcriptomic signatures at 2 days post-stroke, but low divergence from sham at day 14. Pseudotime trajectory inference predicted the in-situ longitudinal progression of monocyte-derived macrophages from their blood precursors into day 2 and day 14 phenotypes, while microglia phenotypes at these two time points were not connected. In contrast to monocyte-derived macrophages, neutrophils were predicted to be continuously de-novo recruited from the blood. Brain single-cell transcriptomics from both female and male aged mice did not show major changes in respect to young mice, but aged and young brains differed in their immune cell composition. Furthermore, blood leukocyte analysis also revealed altered transcriptomes after stroke. However, brain-infiltrating leukocytes displayed higher transcriptomic divergence than their circulating counterparts, indicating that phenotypic diversification into cellular subsets occurs within the brain in the early and the recovery phase of ischemic stroke. In addition, this resource report contains a searchable database https://anratherlab.shinyapps.io/strokevis/ to allow user-friendly access to our data. The StrokeVis tool constitutes a comprehensive gene expression atlas that can be interrogated at the gene and cell type level to explore the transcriptional changes of endothelial and immune cell subsets from mouse brain and blood after stroke. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC10103945/ /pubmed/37066298 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.31.535150 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Garcia-Bonilla, Lidia
Shahanoor, Ziasmin
Sciortino, Rose
Nazarzoda, Omina
Racchumi, Gianfranco
Iadecola, Costantino
Anrather, Josef
Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
title Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
title_full Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
title_fullStr Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
title_full_unstemmed Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
title_short Brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
title_sort brain and blood single-cell transcriptomics in acute and subacute phases after experimental stroke
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10103945/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37066298
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.03.31.535150
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