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Publication : Meningeal neutrophil immune signaling influences behavioral adaptation following threat.

First Author  Wu B Year  2025
Journal  Neuron Volume  113
Issue  2 Pages  260-276.e8
PubMed ID  39561768 Mgi Jnum  J:360619
Mgi Id  MGI:7790394 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2024.10.018
Citation  Wu B, et al. (2024) Meningeal neutrophil immune signaling influences behavioral adaptation following threat. Neuron
abstractText  Social creatures must attend to threat signals from conspecifics and respond appropriately, both behaviorally and physiologically. In this work, we show in mice a threat-sensitive immune mechanism that orchestrates psychological processes and is amenable to social modulation. Repeated encounters with socially cued threats triggered meningeal neutrophil (MN) priming preferentially in males. MN activity was correlated with attenuated defensive responses to cues. Canonical neutrophil-specific activation marker CD177 was upregulated after social threat cueing, and its genetic ablation abrogated male behavioral phenotypes. CD177 signals favored meningeal T helper (Th)1-like immune bias, which blunted neural response to threatening stimuli by enhancing intrinsic GABAergic inhibition within the prelimbic cortex via interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). MN signaling was sensitized by negative emotional states and governed by socially dependent androgen release. This male-biased hormone/neutrophil regulatory axis is seemingly conserved in humans. Our findings provide insights into how immune responses influence behavioral threat responses, suggesting a possible neuroimmune basis of emotional regulation.
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