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

  • Maeve Boyce
  • , Ying Xin
  • , Olivia Chowdhury
  • , Peng Shang
  • , Haitao Liu
  • , Victoria Koontz
  • , Anastasia Strizhakova
  • , Mihir Nemani
  • , Stacey Hose
  • , J. Samuel Zigler
  • , Matthew Campbell
  • , Debasish Sinha
  • , James T. Handa
  • , Kai Kaarniranta
  • , Jiang Qian
  • , Sayan Ghosh
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • Trinity College Dublin
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • University of Eastern Finland

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3535
JournalCells
Volume11
Issue number22
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2022

Keywords

  • Akt2
  • CD14
  • LR-loop
  • age-related macular degeneration
  • chronic inflammation
  • integrin α4
  • integrin β1
  • microglia
  • neutrophils
  • retinal pigmented epithelial cells

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