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Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model

In dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), inflammation plays a key role in disease pathogenesis. Innate immune cells such as microglia and neutrophils infiltrate the sub-retinal space (SRS) to induce chronic inflammation and AMD progression. But a major gap in our understanding is how these cel...

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Autores principales: Boyce, Maeve, Xin, Ying, Chowdhury, Olivia, Shang, Peng, Liu, Haitao, Koontz, Victoria, Strizhakova, Anastasia, Nemani, Mihir, Hose, Stacey, Zigler, J. Samuel, Campbell, Matthew, Sinha, Debasish, Handa, James T., Kaarniranta, Kai, Qian, Jiang, Ghosh, Sayan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9688699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36428965
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11223535
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author Boyce, Maeve
Xin, Ying
Chowdhury, Olivia
Shang, Peng
Liu, Haitao
Koontz, Victoria
Strizhakova, Anastasia
Nemani, Mihir
Hose, Stacey
Zigler, J. Samuel
Campbell, Matthew
Sinha, Debasish
Handa, James T.
Kaarniranta, Kai
Qian, Jiang
Ghosh, Sayan
author_facet Boyce, Maeve
Xin, Ying
Chowdhury, Olivia
Shang, Peng
Liu, Haitao
Koontz, Victoria
Strizhakova, Anastasia
Nemani, Mihir
Hose, Stacey
Zigler, J. Samuel
Campbell, Matthew
Sinha, Debasish
Handa, James T.
Kaarniranta, Kai
Qian, Jiang
Ghosh, Sayan
author_sort Boyce, Maeve
collection PubMed
description In dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), inflammation plays a key role in disease pathogenesis. Innate immune cells such as microglia and neutrophils infiltrate the sub-retinal space (SRS) to induce chronic inflammation and AMD progression. But a major gap in our understanding is how these cells interact with each other in AMD. Here, we report a novel concept of how dynamic interactions between microglia and neutrophils contribute to AMD pathology. Using well-characterized genetically engineered mouse models as tools, we show that in the diseased state, retinal pigmented epithelial (RPE) cells trigger pro-inflammatory (M1) transition in microglia with diminished expression of the homeostatic marker, CX3CR1. Activated microglia localize to the SRS and regulate local neutrophil function, triggering their activation and thereby inducing early RPE changes. Ligand receptor (LR)-loop analysis and cell culture studies revealed that M1 microglia also induce the expression of neutrophil adhesion mediators (integrin β1/α4) through their interaction with CD14 on microglia. Furthermore, microglia-induced neutrophil activation and subsequent neutrophil-mediated RPE alterations were mitigated by inhibiting Akt2 in microglia. These results suggest that the Akt2 pathway in microglia drives M1 microglia-mediated neutrophil activation, thereby triggering early RPE degeneration and is a novel therapeutic target for early AMD, a stage without treatment options.
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spelling pubmed-96886992022-11-25 Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model Boyce, Maeve Xin, Ying Chowdhury, Olivia Shang, Peng Liu, Haitao Koontz, Victoria Strizhakova, Anastasia Nemani, Mihir Hose, Stacey Zigler, J. Samuel Campbell, Matthew Sinha, Debasish Handa, James T. Kaarniranta, Kai Qian, Jiang Ghosh, Sayan Cells Article In dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), inflammation plays a key role in disease pathogenesis. Innate immune cells such as microglia and neutrophils infiltrate the sub-retinal space (SRS) to induce chronic inflammation and AMD progression. But a major gap in our understanding is how these cells interact with each other in AMD. Here, we report a novel concept of how dynamic interactions between microglia and neutrophils contribute to AMD pathology. Using well-characterized genetically engineered mouse models as tools, we show that in the diseased state, retinal pigmented epithelial (RPE) cells trigger pro-inflammatory (M1) transition in microglia with diminished expression of the homeostatic marker, CX3CR1. Activated microglia localize to the SRS and regulate local neutrophil function, triggering their activation and thereby inducing early RPE changes. Ligand receptor (LR)-loop analysis and cell culture studies revealed that M1 microglia also induce the expression of neutrophil adhesion mediators (integrin β1/α4) through their interaction with CD14 on microglia. Furthermore, microglia-induced neutrophil activation and subsequent neutrophil-mediated RPE alterations were mitigated by inhibiting Akt2 in microglia. These results suggest that the Akt2 pathway in microglia drives M1 microglia-mediated neutrophil activation, thereby triggering early RPE degeneration and is a novel therapeutic target for early AMD, a stage without treatment options. MDPI 2022-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9688699/ /pubmed/36428965 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11223535 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Boyce, Maeve
Xin, Ying
Chowdhury, Olivia
Shang, Peng
Liu, Haitao
Koontz, Victoria
Strizhakova, Anastasia
Nemani, Mihir
Hose, Stacey
Zigler, J. Samuel
Campbell, Matthew
Sinha, Debasish
Handa, James T.
Kaarniranta, Kai
Qian, Jiang
Ghosh, Sayan
Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model
title Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model
title_full Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model
title_fullStr Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model
title_full_unstemmed Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model
title_short Microglia–Neutrophil Interactions Drive Dry AMD-like Pathology in a Mouse Model
title_sort microglia–neutrophil interactions drive dry amd-like pathology in a mouse model
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9688699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36428965
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11223535
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