Institute of Laboratory Medicine, Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, University Hospital; Leipzig, Germany.
Institute of Laboratory Medicine, Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, University Hospital; Leipzig, Germany.
Kidney Int. 2024 Dec;106(6):1101-1116. doi: 10.1016/j.kint.2024.06.028. Epub 2024 Jul 30.
Cognitive impairment is common in extracerebral diseases such as chronic kidney disease (CKD). Kidney transplantation reverses cognitive impairment, indicating that cognitive impairment driven by CKD is therapeutically amendable. However, we lack mechanistic insights allowing development of targeted therapies. Using a combination of mouse models (including mice with neuron-specific IL-1R1 deficiency), single cell analyses (single-nuclei RNA-sequencing and single-cell thallium autometallography), human samples and in vitro experiments we demonstrate that microglia activation impairs neuronal potassium homeostasis and cognition in CKD. CKD disrupts the barrier of brain endothelial cells in vitro and the blood-brain barrier in vivo, establishing that the uremic state modifies vascular permeability in the brain. Exposure to uremic conditions impairs calcium homeostasis in microglia, enhances microglial potassium efflux via the calcium-dependent channel K3.1, and induces p38-MAPK associated IL-1β maturation in microglia. Restoring potassium homeostasis in microglia using a K3.1-specific inhibitor (TRAM34) improves CKD-triggered cognitive impairment. Likewise, inhibition of the IL-1β receptor 1 (IL-1R1) using anakinra or genetically abolishing neuronal IL-1R1 expression in neurons prevent CKD-mediated reduced neuronal potassium turnover and CKD-induced impaired cognition. Accordingly, in CKD mice, impaired cognition can be ameliorated by either preventing microglia activation or inhibiting IL-1R-signaling in neurons. Thus, our data suggest that potassium efflux from microglia triggers their activation, which promotes microglia IL-1β release and IL-1R1-mediated neuronal dysfunction in CKD. Hence, our study provides new mechanistic insight into cognitive impairment in association with CKD and identifies possible new therapeutic approaches.
认知障碍在脑外疾病中很常见,如慢性肾脏病(CKD)。肾移植可逆转认知障碍,表明由 CKD 驱动的认知障碍具有治疗可矫正性。然而,我们缺乏机制上的见解,无法开发针对性的治疗方法。我们使用了小鼠模型(包括神经元特异性 IL-1R1 缺陷小鼠)、单细胞分析(单细胞 RNA 测序和单细胞铊自动金属成像)、人类样本和体外实验的组合,证明了小胶质细胞的激活会损害 CKD 患者的神经元钾离子稳态和认知功能。CKD 会破坏体外脑内皮细胞的屏障和体内血脑屏障,表明尿毒症状态会改变大脑的血管通透性。暴露于尿毒症条件会损害小胶质细胞的钙稳态,通过钙依赖性通道 K3.1 增强小胶质细胞的钾外流,并诱导小胶质细胞中 p38-MAPK 相关的 IL-1β成熟。使用 K3.1 特异性抑制剂(TRAM34)恢复小胶质细胞中的钾离子稳态,可以改善 CKD 引起的认知障碍。同样,使用 anakinra 抑制 IL-1β 受体 1(IL-1R1)或在神经元中遗传消除神经元 IL-1R1 表达,可以防止 CKD 引起的神经元钾离子周转率降低和 CKD 引起的认知障碍。因此,在 CKD 小鼠中,通过防止小胶质细胞激活或抑制神经元中的 IL-1R 信号,都可以改善认知障碍。因此,我们的数据表明,小胶质细胞钾离子外流引发其激活,从而促进小胶质细胞 IL-1β 释放和 CKD 中神经元功能障碍。因此,我们的研究为 CKD 相关认知障碍提供了新的机制见解,并确定了可能的新治疗方法。