The fibrin-derived γ377-395 peptide inhibits microglia activation and suppresses relapsing paralysis in central nervous system autoimmune disease

Author:

Adams Ryan A.1,Bauer Jan2,Flick Matthew J.3,Sikorski Shoana L.1,Nuriel Tal1,Lassmann Hans2,Degen Jay L.3,Akassoglou Katerina1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093

2. Center for Brain Research, Medical University of Vienna, A-1090 Vienna, Austria

3. Children's Hospital Research Foundation and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45229

Abstract

Perivascular microglia activation is a hallmark of inflammatory demyelination in multiple sclerosis (MS), but the mechanisms underlying microglia activation and specific strategies to attenuate their activation remain elusive. Here, we identify fibrinogen as a novel regulator of microglia activation and show that targeting of the interaction of fibrinogen with the microglia integrin receptor Mac-1 (αMβ2, CD11b/CD18) is sufficient to suppress experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice that retain full coagulation function. We show that fibrinogen, which is deposited perivascularly in MS plaques, signals through Mac-1 and induces the differentiation of microglia to phagocytes via activation of Akt and Rho. Genetic disruption of fibrinogen–Mac-1 interaction in fibrinogen-γ390-396A knock-in mice or pharmacologically impeding fibrinogen–Mac-1 interaction through intranasal delivery of a fibrinogen-derived inhibitory peptide (γ377-395) attenuates microglia activation and suppresses relapsing paralysis. Because blocking fibrinogen–Mac-1 interactions affects the proinflammatory but not the procoagulant properties of fibrinogen, targeting the γ377-395 fibrinogen epitope could represent a potential therapeutic strategy for MS and other neuroinflammatory diseases associated with blood-brain barrier disruption and microglia activation.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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