4.8 Article

ASK1 signaling regulates phase-specific glial interactions during neuroinflammation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2103812119

Keywords

glial interactions; neuroinflammation; microglia; astrocyte; ASK1

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI [JP21K09688, JP20K09820, JP20K07751, JP19K09943, JP20K07032, JP26114009, JP18H03995, JP18K19469, JP19K16067, JP19KK0229, JP21H02819, JP21K18279]
  2. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development [JP19gm5010001]
  3. Takeda Science Foundation
  4. Suzuken Memorial Foundation
  5. Naito Foundation
  6. UeharaMemorial Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study found that the lack of ASK1 in microglia/macrophages can reduce neuroinflammation in both early and later stages of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), while the lack of ASK1 in astrocytes only improves neuroinflammation in the later stage. The deficiency of ASK1 in T cells and dendritic cells has no significant effect on the severity of EAE. These findings demonstrate the cell-type-specific roles of ASK1 and the phase-specific ASK1-dependent glial cell interactions in the pathophysiology of EAE.
Neuroinflammation is well known to be associated with neurode-generative diseases. Apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase that has been implicated in neuroinflammation, but its precise cellular and molecular mechanisms remain unknown. In this study, we generated conditional knockout (CKO) mice that lack ASK1 in T cells, dendritic cells, microglia/macrophages, microglia, or astrocytes, to assess the roles of ASK1 during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). We found that neuroinflammation was reduced in both the early and later stages of EAE in microglia/macrophage-specific ASK1 knockout mice, whereas only the later-stage neuroinflammation was ameliorated in astrocyte-specific ASK1 knockout mice. ASK1 deficiency in T cells and dendritic cells had no significant effects on EAE severity. Further, we found that ASK1 in microglia/macrophages induces a proinflammatory environment, which subsequently activates astrocytes to exacerbate neuroinflammation. Microglia-specific ASK1 deletion was achieved using a CX3CR1(CreER) system, and we found that ASK1 signaling in microglia played a major role in generating and maintaining disease. Activated astrocytes produce key inflammatory mediators, including CCL2, that further activated and recruited microglia/macrophages, in an astrocytic ASK1-dependent manner. Astrocyte-specific analysis revealed CCL2 expression was higher in the later stage compared with the early stage, suggesting a greater proinflammatory role of astrocytes in the later stage. Our findings demonstrate cell-type-specific roles of ASK1 and suggest phase-specific ASK1-dependent glial cell interactions in EAE pathophysiology. We propose glial ASK1 as a promising therapeutic target for reducing neuroinflammation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available