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    Article has an altmetric score of 28
    Título
    Microglial phagocytosis dysfunction in stroke is driven by energy depletion and induction of autophagy
    Autor(es)
    Beccari, Sol
    Sierra‐Torre, Virginia
    Valero, Jorge
    Pereira-Iglesias, Marta
    García-Zaballa, Mikel
    Soria, Federico N.
    De Las Heras-Garcia, Laura
    Carretero-Guillen, Alejandro
    Capetillo-Zarate, Estibaliz
    Domercq, Maria
    Huguet, Paloma
    Ramonet, David
    Osman, Ahmed
    Han, Wei
    Dominguez, Cecilia
    Faust, Travis E.
    Touzani, Omar
    Pampliega, Olatz
    Boya, Patricia
    Schafer, Dorothy
    Mariño, Guillermo
    Canet-Soulas, Emmanuelle
    Blomgren, Klas
    Plaza‐Zabala, Ainhoa
    Sierra, Amanda
    Palabras clave
    Autophagy
    ischemia
    lysosomes
    microglia
    phagocytosis
    rapamycin
    stroke
    tMCAo
    Clasificación UNESCO
    2410 Biología Humana
    2490 Neurociencias
    Fecha de publicación
    2023-07
    Resumen
    Microglial phagocytosis of apoptotic debris prevents buildup damage of neighbor neurons and inflammatory responses. Whereas microglia are very competent phagocytes under physiological conditions, we report their dysfunction in mouse and preclinical monkey models of stroke (macaques and marmosets) by transient occlusion of the medial cerebral artery (tMCAo). By analyzing recently published bulk and single cell RNA sequencing databases, we show that the phagocytosis dysfunction was not explained by transcriptional changes. In contrast, we demonstrate that the impairment of both engulfment and degradation was related to energy depletion triggered by oxygen and nutrient deprivation (OND), which led to reduced process motility, lysosomal exhaustion, and the induction of a protective macroautophagy/autophagy response in microglia. Basal autophagy, in charge of removing and recycling intracellular elements, was critical to maintain microglial physiology, including survival and phagocytosis, as we determined both in vivo and in vitro using pharmacological and transgenic approaches. Notably, the autophagy inducer rapamycin partially prevented the phagocytosis impairment induced by tMCAo in vivo but not by OND in vitro, where it even had a detrimental effect on microglia, suggesting that modulating microglial autophagy to optimal levels may be a hard to achieve goal. Nonetheless, our results show that pharmacological interventions, acting directly on microglia or indirectly on the brain environment, have the potential to recover phagocytosis efficiency in the diseased brain. We propose that phagocytosis is a therapeutic target yet to be explored in stroke and other brain disorders and provide evidence that it can be modulated in vivo using rapamycin.Abbreviations: AIF1/IBA1: allograft inflammatory factor 1; AMBRA1: autophagy/beclin 1 regulator 1; ATG4B: autophagy related 4B, cysteine peptidase; ATP: adenosine triphosphate; BECN1: beclin 1, autophagy related; CASP3: caspase 3; CBF: cerebral blood flow; CCA: common carotid artery; CCR2: chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 2; CIR: cranial irradiation; Csf1r/v-fms: colony stimulating factor 1 receptor; CX3CR1: chemokine (C-X3-C motif) receptor 1; DAPI: 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole; DG: dentate gyrus; GO: Gene Ontology; HBSS: Hanks' balanced salt solution; HI: hypoxia-ischemia; LAMP1: lysosomal-associated membrane protein 1; MAP1LC3/LC3: microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3; MCA: medial cerebral artery; MTOR: mechanistic target of rapamycin kinase; OND: oxygen and nutrient deprivation; Ph/A coupling: phagocytosis-apoptosis coupling; Ph capacity: phagocytic capacity; Ph index: phagocytic index; SQSTM1: sequestosome 1; RNA-Seq: RNA sequencing; TEM: transmission electron microscopy; tMCAo: transient medial cerebral artery occlusion; ULK1: unc-51 like kinase 1.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10366/154670
    ISSN
    1554-8627
    DOI
    10.1080/15548627.2023.2165313
    Versión del editor
    https://doi.org/10.1080/15548627.2023.2165313
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