Makarava Natallia, Safadi Tarek, Bocharova Olga, Mychko Olga, Pandit Narayan P, Molesworth Kara, Eyo Ukpong B, Baskakov Ilia V
Department of Neurobiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 111 Penn St, Baltimore, MD, 21201, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
J Neuroinflammation. 2025 Aug 31;22(1):210. doi: 10.1186/s12974-025-03542-z.
Microglia continuously monitor neuronal health through somatic purinergic junctions, where microglial processes establish dynamic contacts with neuronal cell bodies. The P2Y12 receptor is a key component of these junctions, essential for intercellular communication between ramified microglia and neurons under homeostatic conditions. However, during chronic neurodegeneration, such as that seen in prion diseases, microglia transition from process-based surveillance to extensive body-to-body interactions, enveloping neuronal somata. Despite its widespread use as a homeostatic marker, the functional role of P2Y12 in chronic neurodegenerative contexts remains largely unexplored.
We investigated how genetic deletion of P2Y12 affects microglial morphology and microglia-neuron interactions in both healthy and prion-infected adult mice. In parallel, we assessed the impact of P2Y12 loss on prion disease progression and associated neuropathology.
In healthy adult mice, deletion of P2Y12 significantly disrupted canonical process-to-soma contacts, while paradoxically promoting increased microglia-neuron body-to-body interactions. This finding uncovers a previously unrecognized, P2Y12-independent mode of microglial engagement with neurons. Strikingly, in prion-infected mice, P2Y12 loss significantly increased the prevalence of neuronal envelopment by reactive microglia, and accelerated disease progression. Notably, this acceleration occurred without affecting prion accumulation or hippocampal neuronal loss, implicating altered microglia-neuron interactions - specifically excessive envelopment - as a key driver of disease exacerbation.
This study redefines P2Y12 not as a passive marker of homeostasis but as an active regulator of neuroimmune dynamics. We demonstrate that P2Y12 is essential for maintaining balanced microglia-neuron communication under physiological conditions and for restraining maladaptive microglial behavior during chronic neurodegeneration associated with prion disease. These findings uncover a novel mechanism by which microglia contribute to disease progression and position P2Y12 as a potential therapeutic target for modulating microglial responses in neurodegenerative disorders.
小胶质细胞通过体细胞嘌呤能连接持续监测神经元健康,在该连接中,小胶质细胞的突起与神经元细胞体建立动态接触。P2Y12受体是这些连接的关键组成部分,对于稳态条件下分支状小胶质细胞与神经元之间的细胞间通讯至关重要。然而,在慢性神经退行性变过程中,如在朊病毒疾病中所见,小胶质细胞从基于突起的监测转变为广泛的体对体相互作用,包裹神经元胞体。尽管P2Y12作为一种稳态标志物被广泛使用,但其在慢性神经退行性背景下的功能作用仍 largely未被探索。
我们研究了P2Y12基因缺失如何影响健康和朊病毒感染的成年小鼠中的小胶质细胞形态以及小胶质细胞与神经元的相互作用。同时,我们评估了P2Y12缺失对朊病毒疾病进展和相关神经病理学的影响。
在健康成年小鼠中,P2Y12的缺失显著破坏了典型的突起与胞体接触,而反常地促进了小胶质细胞与神经元体对体相互作用的增加。这一发现揭示了一种先前未被认识的、不依赖P2Y12的小胶质细胞与神经元相互作用模式。令人惊讶的是,在朊病毒感染的小鼠中,P2Y12的缺失显著增加了反应性小胶质细胞对神经元的包裹发生率,并加速了疾病进展。值得注意的是,这种加速发生在不影响朊病毒积累或海马神经元丢失的情况下,表明小胶质细胞与神经元相互作用的改变——特别是过度包裹——是疾病恶化的关键驱动因素。
本研究重新定义了P2Y12,它不是稳态的被动标志物,而是神经免疫动力学的主动调节因子。我们证明,P2Y12对于在生理条件下维持小胶质细胞与神经元之间的平衡通讯以及在与朊病毒疾病相关的慢性神经退行性变过程中抑制适应性不良的小胶质细胞行为至关重要。这些发现揭示了小胶质细胞促进疾病进展的一种新机制,并将P2Y12定位为调节神经退行性疾病中小胶质细胞反应的潜在治疗靶点。