Adult microglial TGFβ1 is required for microglia homeostasis via an autocrine mechanism to maintain cognitive function in mice.
Alicia BedollaElliot WegmanMax WeedMessiyah K StevensKierra WareAditi ParanjpeAnastasia AlkhimovitchIgal IferganAleksandr TaranovJoshua D PeterRosa Maria Salazar GonzalezJ Elliott RobinsonLucas McClainKrishna M RoskinNigel H GreigYu LuoPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
While TGF-β signaling is essential for microglial function, the cellular source of TGF-β1 ligand and its spatial regulation remains unclear in the adult CNS. Our data supports that microglia but not astrocytes or neurons are the primary producers of TGF-β1 ligands needed for microglial homeostasis. Microglia-Tgfb1 KO leads to the activation of microglia featuring a dyshomeostatic transcriptome that resembles disease-associated, injury-associated, and aged microglia, suggesting microglial self-produced TGF-β1 ligands are important in the adult CNS. Astrocytes in MG-Tgfb1 inducible (i)KO mice show a transcriptome profile that is closely aligned with an LPS-associated astrocyte profile. Additionally, using sparse mosaic single-cell microglia KO of TGF-β1 ligand we established an autocrine mechanism for signaling. Here we show that MG-Tgfb1 iKO mice present cognitive deficits, supporting that precise spatial regulation of TGF-β1 ligand derived from microglia is required for the maintenance of brain homeostasis and normal cognitive function in the adult brain.
Keyphrases
- inflammatory response
- neuropathic pain
- transforming growth factor
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- lps induced
- single cell
- spinal cord
- rna seq
- spinal cord injury
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- high fat diet induced
- gene expression
- high throughput
- blood brain barrier
- white matter
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- resting state
- metabolic syndrome
- brain injury
- skeletal muscle
- young adults
- wild type