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Publication : Monocyte-derived IL-6 programs microglia to rebuild damaged brain vasculature.

First Author  Choi BR Year  2023
Journal  Nat Immunol Volume  24
Issue  7 Pages  1110-1123
PubMed ID  37248420 Mgi Jnum  J:337729
Mgi Id  MGI:7495994 Doi  10.1038/s41590-023-01521-1
Citation  Choi BR, et al. (2023) Monocyte-derived IL-6 programs microglia to rebuild damaged brain vasculature. Nat Immunol 24(7):1110-1123
abstractText  Cerebrovascular injury (CVI) is a common pathology caused by infections, injury, stroke, neurodegeneration and autoimmune disease. Rapid resolution of a CVI requires a coordinated innate immune response. In the present study, we sought mechanistic insights into how central nervous system-infiltrating monocytes program resident microglia to mediate angiogenesis and cerebrovascular repair after an intracerebral hemorrhage. In the penumbrae of human stroke brain lesions, we identified a subpopulation of microglia that express vascular endothelial growth factor A. These cells, termed 'repair-associated microglia' (RAMs), were also observed in a rodent model of CVI and coexpressed interleukin (IL)-6Ra. Cerebrovascular repair did not occur in IL-6 knockouts or in mice lacking microglial IL-6Ra expression and single-cell transcriptomic analyses revealed faulty RAM programming in the absence of IL-6 signaling. Infiltrating CCR2(+) monocytes were the primary source of IL-6 after a CVI and were required to endow microglia with proliferative and proangiogenic properties. Faulty RAM programming in the absence of IL-6 or inflammatory monocytes resulted in poor cerebrovascular repair, neuronal destruction and sustained neurological deficits that were all restored via exogenous IL-6 administration. These data provide a molecular and cellular basis for how monocytes instruct microglia to repair damaged brain vasculature and promote functional recovery after injury.
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