4.8 Article

Microglia coordinate cellular interactions during spinal cord repair in mice

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-31797-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01NS099532, R01NS083942, R35NS111582]
  2. Ray W. Poppleton Endowment
  3. Craig H. Neilsen Foundation [457267]
  4. Wings for Life Spinal Research Foundation
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [92168105]
  6. [P30NS104177]

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This study demonstrates that microglia are necessary for optimal repair after murine spinal cord injury (SCI) using microglia-specific depletion techniques and single cell transcriptomics.
Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) triggers a neuro-inflammatory response dominated by tissue-resident microglia and monocyte derived macrophages (MDMs). Since activated microglia and MDMs are morphologically identical and express similar phenotypic markers in vivo, identifying injury responses specifically coordinated by microglia has historically been challenging. Here, we pharmacologically depleted microglia and use anatomical, histopathological, tract tracing, bulk and single cell RNA sequencing to reveal the cellular and molecular responses to SCI controlled by microglia. We show that microglia are vital for SCI recovery and coordinate injury responses in CNS-resident glia and infiltrating leukocytes. Depleting microglia exacerbates tissue damage and worsens functional recovery. Conversely, restoring select microglia-dependent signaling axes, identified through sequencing data, in microglia depleted mice prevents secondary damage and promotes recovery. Additional bioinformatics analyses reveal that optimal repair after SCI might be achieved by co-opting key ligand-receptor interactions between microglia, astrocytes and MDMs. Here the authors show, using microglia-specific depletion techniques and single cell transcriptomics, that optimal repair after murine spinal cord injury (SCI) requires microglia.

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