Graduate Program in Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Roanoke, Virginia 24016
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061.
J Neurosci. 2024 Mar 20;44(12):e0191232024. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0191-23.2024.
While originally identified as an antiviral pathway, recent work has implicated that cyclic GMP-AMP-synthase-Stimulator of Interferon Genes (cGAS-STING) signaling is playing a critical role in the neuroinflammatory response to traumatic brain injury (TBI). STING activation results in a robust inflammatory response characterized by the production of inflammatory cytokines called interferons, as well as hundreds of interferon stimulated genes (ISGs). Global knock-out (KO) mice inhibiting this pathway display neuroprotection with evidence that this pathway is active days after injury; yet, the early neuroinflammatory events stimulated by STING signaling remain understudied. Furthermore, the source of STING signaling during brain injury is unknown. Using a murine controlled cortical impact (CCI) model of TBI, we investigated the peripheral immune and microglial response to injury utilizing male chimeric and conditional STING KO animals, respectively. We demonstrate that peripheral and microglial STING signaling contribute to negative outcomes in cortical lesion volume, cell death, and functional outcomes postinjury. A reduction in overall peripheral immune cell and neutrophil infiltration at the injury site is STING dependent in these models at 24 h. Transcriptomic analysis at 2 h, when STING is active, reveals that microglia drive an early, distinct transcriptional program to elicit proinflammatory genes including interleukin 1-β (IL-1β), which is lost in conditional knock-out mice. The upregulation of alternative innate immune pathways also occurs after injury in these animals, which supports a complex relationship between brain-resident and peripheral immune cells to coordinate the proinflammatory response and immune cell influx to damaged tissue after injury.
虽然最初被鉴定为抗病毒途径,但最近的研究表明环鸟苷酸-腺苷酸合酶-干扰素基因刺激物(cGAS-STING)信号通路在创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的神经炎症反应中起着关键作用。STING 的激活导致强烈的炎症反应,其特征是产生称为干扰素的炎症细胞因子,以及数百种干扰素刺激基因(ISGs)。抑制该途径的全局敲除(KO)小鼠显示出神经保护作用,有证据表明该途径在损伤后数天内仍然活跃;然而,STING 信号刺激的早期神经炎症事件仍未得到充分研究。此外,脑损伤期间 STING 信号的来源尚不清楚。我们使用小鼠控制性皮质撞击(CCI)TBI 模型,分别利用雄性嵌合和条件性 STING KO 动物研究了损伤后的外周免疫和小胶质细胞反应。我们证明,外周和小胶质细胞的 STING 信号会导致皮质损伤体积、细胞死亡和损伤后功能结果的负面结果。在这些模型中,24 小时时,损伤部位的总外周免疫细胞和中性粒细胞浸润依赖于 STING。在 STING 活跃的 2 小时时进行的转录组分析表明,小胶质细胞会引发早期的、独特的转录程序,以引发包括白细胞介素 1-β(IL-1β)在内的促炎基因,而在条件性敲除小鼠中则会丢失这些基因。这些动物在损伤后还会发生其他替代先天免疫途径的上调,这支持了脑内和外周免疫细胞之间的复杂关系,以协调损伤后组织的促炎反应和免疫细胞流入。