4.7 Article

Brain trauma elicits non-canonical macrophage activation states

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROINFLAMMATION
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12974-016-0581-z

关键词

Innate immunity; Macrophage; Monocyte; Traumatic brain injury; Single-cell RNA sequencing; Neuroinflammation; RNA flow cytometry; Polarization; Neurotrauma; Myeloid cells

资金

  1. NIAID [P30 AI027763]
  2. NIDDK [P30 DK063720]
  3. United States Department of Veterans Affairs Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development Program [I01 BX002690]
  4. NIH R01 grant [AG046282]
  5. Rheumatology Research Foundation
  6. Russell/Engleman Rheumatology Research Center

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Background: Macrophage polarization programs, commonly referred to as classical and alternative activation, are widely considered as distinct states that are exclusive of one another and are associated with different functions such as inflammation and wound healing, respectively. In a number of disease contexts, such as traumatic brain injury (TBI), macrophage polarization influences the extent of pathogenesis, and efforts are underway to eliminate pathogenic subsets. However, previous studies have not distinguished whether the simultaneous presence of both classical and alternative activation signatures represents the admixture of differentially polarized macrophages or if they have adopted a unique state characterized by components of both classical and alternative activation. Methods: We analyzed the gene expression profiles of individual monocyte-derived brain macrophages responding to TBI using single-cell RNA sequencing. RNA flow cytometry was used as another single-cell analysis technique to validate the single-cell RNA sequencing results. Results: The analysis of signature polarization genes by single-cell RNA sequencing revealed the presence of diverse activation states, including M(IL4), M(IL10), and M(LPS, IFN gamma). However, the expression of a given polarization marker was no more likely than at random to predict simultaneous expression or repression of markers of another polarization program within the same cell, suggesting a lack of exclusivity in macrophage polarization states in vivo in TBI. Also unexpectedly, individual TBI macrophages simultaneously expressed high levels of signature polarization genes across two or three different polarization states and in several distinct and seemingly incompatible combinations. Conclusions: Single-cell gene expression profiling demonstrated that monocytic macrophages in TBI are not comprised of distinctly polarized subsets but are uniquely and broadly activated. TBI macrophage activation in vivo is deeply complex, with individual cells concurrently adopting both inflammatory and reparative features with a lack of exclusivity. These data provide physiologically relevant evidence that the early macrophage response to TBI is comprised of novel activation states that are discordant with the current paradigm of macrophage polarization-a key consideration for therapeutic modulation.

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