Multidisciplinary Brain Protection Program, Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, 303 Research Drive, Box 3094, Durham, NC, 27710, USA.
Duke Molecular Physiology Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Genome Med. 2024 Aug 2;16(1):95. doi: 10.1186/s13073-024-01368-7.
Ischemic stroke elicits a complex and sustained immune response in the brain. Immunomodulatory treatments have long held promise for improving stroke outcomes, yet none have succeeded in the clinical setting. This lack of success is largely due to our incomplete understanding of how immune cells respond to stroke. The objective of the current study was to dissect the effect of permanent stroke on microglia, the resident immune cells within the brain parenchyma.
A permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (pMCAO) model was used to induce ischemic stroke in young male and female mice. Microglia were sorted from fluorescence reporter mice after pMCAO or sham surgery and then subjected to single-cell RNA sequencing analysis. Various methods, including flow cytometry, RNA in situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry, whole-brain imaging, and bone marrow transplantation, were also employed to dissect the microglial response to stroke. Stroke outcomes were evaluated by infarct size and behavioral tests.
First, we showed the morphologic and spatial changes in microglia after stroke. We then performed single-cell RNA sequencing analysis on microglia isolated from sham and stroke mice of both sexes. The data indicate no major sexual dimorphism in the microglial response to permanent stroke. Notably, we identified seven potential stroke-associated microglial clusters, including four major clusters characterized by a disease-associated microglia-like signature, a highly proliferative state, a macrophage-like profile, and an interferon (IFN) response signature, respectively. Importantly, we provided evidence that the macrophage-like cluster may represent the long-sought stroke-induced microglia subpopulation with increased CD45 expression. Lastly, given that the IFN-responsive subset constitutes the most prominent microglial population in the stroke brain, we used fludarabine to pharmacologically target STAT1 signaling and found that fludarabine treatment improved long-term stroke outcome.
Our findings shed new light on microglia heterogeneity in stroke pathology and underscore the potential of targeting specific microglial populations for effective stroke therapies.
缺血性中风会在大脑中引发复杂而持续的免疫反应。免疫调节治疗长期以来一直有望改善中风的预后,但在临床实践中都没有成功。这种失败在很大程度上是由于我们对免疫细胞如何对中风做出反应的理解不完整。目前研究的目的是剖析永久性大脑中动脉闭塞(pMCAO)对脑实质内常驻免疫细胞小胶质细胞的影响。
使用永久性大脑中动脉闭塞(pMCAO)模型诱导年轻雄性和雌性小鼠发生缺血性中风。在 pMCAO 或假手术后,从小胶质细胞荧光报告小鼠中分离小胶质细胞,并进行单细胞 RNA 测序分析。还采用各种方法,包括流式细胞术、RNA 原位杂交、免疫组织化学、全脑成像和骨髓移植,来剖析小胶质细胞对中风的反应。通过梗死面积和行为测试评估中风结局。
首先,我们展示了中风后小胶质细胞的形态和空间变化。然后,我们对来自雄性和雌性假手术和中风小鼠的小胶质细胞进行了单细胞 RNA 测序分析。数据表明,小胶质细胞对永久性中风的反应没有明显的性别二态性。值得注意的是,我们鉴定了七个潜在的与中风相关的小胶质细胞簇,包括四个主要的簇,其特征分别为疾病相关的小胶质细胞样特征、高度增殖状态、巨噬细胞样表型和干扰素(IFN)反应特征。重要的是,我们提供了证据表明,巨噬细胞样簇可能代表了长期以来寻求的中风诱导的小胶质细胞亚群,其 CD45 表达增加。最后,鉴于 IFN 反应亚群构成中风大脑中最突出的小胶质细胞群体,我们使用氟达拉滨来靶向 STAT1 信号,并发现氟达拉滨治疗改善了长期中风预后。
我们的研究结果揭示了中风病理中小胶质细胞异质性的新视角,并强调了针对特定小胶质细胞群体进行有效中风治疗的潜力。