An atypical role for the myeloid receptor Mincle in central nervous system injury

Author:

Arumugam Thiruma V12,Manzanero Silvia23,Furtado Milena45,Biggins Patrick J2,Hsieh Yu-Hsuan1,Gelderblom Mathias6,MacDonald Kelli PA7,Salimova Ekaterina4,Li Yu-I8,Korn Othmar3,Dewar Deborah9,Macrae I Mhairi9,Ashman Robert B10,Tang Sung-Chun811,Rosenthal Nadia A45,Ruitenberg Marc J212,Magnus Tim6,Wells Christine A313

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore

2. School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

3. Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

4. Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia

5. The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME, USA

6. Department of Neurology, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany

7. Queensland Institute for Medical Research, Herston, Brisbane, Australia

8. Department of Pathology and Department of Neurology, National Taiwan University Hospital and National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan

9. Institute of Neuroscience & Psychology, Wellcome Surgical Institute, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

10. School of Dentistry, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

11. Department of Neurology, Stroke Center, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan

12. Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

13. Faculty of Medicine, Department of Anatomy and Neuroscience, The University of Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

The C-type lectin Mincle is implicated in innate immune responses to sterile inflammation, but its contribution to associated pathologies is not well understood. Herein, we show that Mincle exacerbates neuronal loss following ischemic but not traumatic spinal cord injury. Loss of Mincle was beneficial in a model of transient middle cerebral artery occlusion but did not alter outcomes following heart or gut ischemia. High functional scores in Mincle KO animals using the focal cerebral ischemia model were accompanied by reduced lesion size, fewer infiltrating leukocytes and less neutrophil-derived cytokine production than isogenic controls. Bone marrow chimera experiments revealed that the presence of Mincle in the central nervous system, rather than recruited immune cells, was the critical regulator of a poor outcome following transient middle cerebral artery occlusion. There was no evidence for a direct role for Mincle in microglia or neural activation, but expression in a subset of macrophages resident in the perivascular niche provided new clues on Mincle's role in ischemic stroke.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology,Neurology

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