M-CSF, IL-6, and TGF-β promote generation of a new subset of tissue repair macrophage for traumatic brain injury recovery.
Zhiqi LiJun XiaoXiaoyan XuWeiyun LiRuiyue ZhongLinlin QiJiehui ChenGuizhong CuiShuang WangYuxiao ZhengYing QiuSheng LiXin ZhouYao LuJiaying LyuBin ZhouJia-Wei ZhouNaihe JingBin WeiJin HuHongyan WangPublished in: Science advances (2021)
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) leads to high mortality rate. We aimed to identify the key cytokines favoring TBI repair and found that patients with TBI with a better outcome robustly increased concentrations of macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin-6, and transforming growth factor-β (termed M6T) in cerebrospinal fluid or plasma. Using TBI mice, we identified that M2-like macrophage, microglia, and endothelial cell were major sources to produce M6T. Together with the in vivo tracking of mCherry+ macrophages in zebrafish models, we confirmed that M6T treatment accelerated blood-borne macrophage infiltration and polarization toward a subset of tissue repair macrophages that expressed similar genes as microglia for neuroprotection, angiogenesis and cell migration. M6T therapy in TBI mice and zebrafish improved neurological function while blocking M6T-exacerbated brain injury. Considering low concentrations of M6T in some patients with poor prognostic, M6T treatment might repair TBI via generating a previously unidentified subset of tissue repair macrophages.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- brain injury
- transforming growth factor
- severe traumatic brain injury
- adipose tissue
- cell migration
- cerebrospinal fluid
- endothelial cells
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- cerebral ischemia
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- neuropathic pain
- combination therapy
- genome wide
- signaling pathway
- spinal cord
- high fat diet induced
- risk factors
- drinking water
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- coronary artery disease
- insulin resistance
- bone marrow