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Carbon monoxide controls microglial erythrophagocytosis by regulating CD36 surface expression to reduce the severity of hemorrhagic injury.

Sandra KaiserLisa SelznerJanick WeberNils Schallner
Published in: Glia (2020)
Microglial erythrophagocytosis is crucial in injury response to hemorrhagic stroke. We hypothesized that regulation of microglial erythrophagocytosis via HO-1/CO depends on a pathway involving reactive oxygen species (ROS) and CD36 surface-expression. The microglial BV-2 cell line and primary microglia (PMG) were incubated +/-blood and +/-CO-exposure. PMG isolated from tissue-specific HO-1-deficient (LyzM-Cre-Hmox1 fl/fl ) and CD36 -/- mice or siRNA against AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) were used to test our hypothesis. In a murine subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) model, we compared neuronal injury in wild-type and CD36 -/- mice. Readouts included vasospasm, microglia activation, neuronal apoptosis, and spatial memory. We observed increased microglial HO-1-expression after blood-exposure. A burst in ROS-production was seen after CO-exposure, which led to increased amounts of phosphorylated AMPK with subsequently enhanced CD36 surface-expression. Naïve PMG from LyzM-Cre-Hmox1 fl/fl mice showed reduced ROS-production and CD36 surface-expression and failed to respond to CO with increased CD36 surface-expression. Lack of HO-1 and CD36 resulted in reduced erythrophagocytosis that could not be rescued with CO. Erythrophagocytosis was enhanced in BV-2 cells in the presence of exogenous CO, which was abolished in cells treated with siRNA to AMPK. CD36 -/- mice subjected to SAH showed enhanced neuronal cell death, which resulted in impaired spatial memory function. We demonstrate that microglial phagocytic function partly depends on a pathway involving HO-1 with changes in ROS-production, phosphorylated AMPK, and surface expression of CD36. CD36 was identified as a crucial component in blood clearance after hemorrhage that ultimately determines neuronal outcome. These results demand further investigations studying the potential neuroprotective properties of CO.
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