MICROGLIA AND INFILTRATING T-CELLS ADOPT LONG-TERM, AGE-SPECIFIC, TRANSCRIPTIONAL CHANGES AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN MICE.
Zhangying ChenMecca B A R IslamKacie P FordGuangyuan ZhaoShang-Yang ChenYidan WangBooker T DavisAlexios-Fotios A MentisSteven J SchwulstPublished in: Shock (Augusta, Ga.) (2022)
Aged traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients suffer increased mortality and long-term neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric morbidity compared with younger patients. Microglia, the resident innate immune cells of the brain, are complicit in both. We hypothesized that aged microglia would fail to return to a homeostatic state after TBI and adopt a long-term injury-associated state within aged brains compared with young brains after TBI. Young and aged male C57BL/6 mice underwent TBI via controlled cortical impact versus sham injury and were sacrificed 4 months post-TBI. We used single-cell RNA sequencing to examine age-associated cellular responses after TBI. Brains were harvested, and CD45+ cells were isolated via fluorescence-activated cell sorting. cDNA libraries were prepared using the 10x Genomics Chromium Single Cell 3' Reagent Kit, followed by sequencing on a HiSeq 4,000 instrument and computational analyses. Post-injury, aged mice demonstrated a disparate microglial gene signature and an increase in infiltrating T cells compared with young adult mice. Notably, aged mice post-injury had a subpopulation of age-specific, immune-inflammatory microglia resembling the gene profile of neurodegenerative disease-associated microglia with enriched pathways involved in leukocyte recruitment and brain-derived neurotrophic factor signaling. Meanwhile, post-injury, aged mice demonstrated heterogeneous T-cell infiltration with gene profiles corresponding to CD8 effector memory, CD8 naive-like, CD8 early active T cells, and Th1 cells with enriched pathways, such as macromolecule synthesis. Taken together, our data showed that the aged brain had an age-specific gene signature change in both T-cell infiltrates and microglia, which may contribute to its increased vulnerability to TBI and the long-term sequelae of TBI.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- single cell
- inflammatory response
- severe traumatic brain injury
- high fat diet induced
- end stage renal disease
- neuropathic pain
- rna seq
- mild traumatic brain injury
- induced apoptosis
- copy number
- chronic kidney disease
- genome wide
- young adults
- immune response
- newly diagnosed
- peritoneal dialysis
- gene expression
- high throughput
- white matter
- spinal cord
- coronary artery disease
- insulin resistance
- risk factors
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- stem cells
- cell cycle arrest
- transcription factor
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- deep learning
- spinal cord injury
- cell death
- multiple sclerosis
- brain injury
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- working memory
- nk cells
- cerebral ischemia