Experimental Type 2 diabetes and lipotoxicity-associated neuroinflammation involve mitochondrial DNA-mediated cGAS/STING axis: implication of Type-1 interferon response in cognitive impairment.
Kumari PreetiAnika SoodValencia FernandesIslauddin KhanDharmendra Kumar KhatriShashi Bala SinghPublished in: Molecular neurobiology (2024)
Type-1 IFN (interferon)-associated innate immune response is increasingly getting attention in neurodegenerative and metabolic diseases like type 2 diabetes (T2DM). However, its significance in T2DM/lipotoxicity-induced neuroglia changes and cognitive impairment is missing. The present study aims to evaluate the involvement of cGAS (cyclic GMP-AMP synthase)-STING (stimulator of interferon gene), IRF3 (interferon regulatory factor-3), TBK (TANK binding kinase)-mediated Type-1 IFN response in the diabetic brain, and lipotoxicity (palmitate-bovine serum albumin conjugate/PA-BSA)-induced changes in cells (neuro2a and BV2). T2DM was induced in C57/BL6 mice by feeding on a high-fat diet (HFD, 60% Kcal) for 16 weeks and injecting a single dose of streptozotocin (100 mg/kg, i.p) in the 12th week. Plasma biochemical parameter analysis, neurobehavioral assessment, protein expression, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction study were carried out to decipher the hypothesis. T2DM-associated metabolic and lipotoxic stress led to mitochondrial impairment causing leakage of mtDNA to the cytoplasm further commencing cGAS activation and its downstream signaling. The diseased hippocampus and cortex showed decreased expression of synaptophysin (p < 0.01) and PSD-95 (p < 0.01, p < 0.05) with increased expression of cGAS (p < 0.001), p-STING (p < 0.001), p-STAT1 (signal transducer and activator of transcription) (p < 0.01), and IFN-β (p < 0.001) compared to normal control. The IFN-β/p-STAT1-mediated microglia activation was executed employing a conditioned media approach. C-176, a selective STING inhibitor, alleviated cGAS/p-STING/IFN-β expression and proinflammatory microglia/M1-associated markers (CD16 expression, CXCL10, TNF-α, IL-1β mRNA fold change) in the diabetic brain. The present study suggests Type-1IFN response may result in neuroglia dyshomeostasis affecting normal brain function. Alleviating STING signaling has the potential to protect T2DM-associated central ailment.
Keyphrases
- dendritic cells
- immune response
- high fat diet
- type diabetes
- cognitive impairment
- mitochondrial dna
- poor prognosis
- glycemic control
- insulin resistance
- binding protein
- copy number
- diabetic rats
- adipose tissue
- rheumatoid arthritis
- cardiovascular disease
- resting state
- cell proliferation
- clinical trial
- white matter
- inflammatory response
- functional connectivity
- multiple sclerosis
- cell death
- skeletal muscle
- randomized controlled trial
- dna methylation
- cerebral ischemia
- nuclear factor
- climate change
- risk assessment
- drug induced
- mass spectrometry
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- high resolution
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- neuropathic pain
- tyrosine kinase
- preterm birth
- double blind
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- weight loss
- clinical evaluation
- wild type
- cell cycle arrest
- high fat diet induced