Back to Search Start Over

TPL2 kinase activity regulates microglial inflammatory responses and promotes neurodegeneration in tauopathy mice.

Authors :
Yuanyuan Wang
Tiffany Wu
Ming-Chi Tsai
Rezzonico, Mitchell G.
Abdel-Haleem, Alyaa M.
Xie, Luke
Gandham, Vineela D.
Hai Ngu
Stark, Kimberly
Glock, Caspar
Daqi Xu
Foreman, Oded
Friedman, Brad A.
Sheng, Morgan
Hanson, Jesse E.
Source :
eLife. 8/9/2023, p1-29. 29p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Tumor progression locus 2 (TPL2) (MAP3K8) is a central signaling node in the inflammatory response of peripheral immune cells. We find that TPL2 kinase activity modulates microglial cytokine release and is required for microglia-mediated neuron death in vitro. In acute in vivo neuroinflammation settings, TPL2 kinase activity regulates microglia activation states and brain cytokine levels. In a tauopathy model of chronic neurodegeneration, loss of TPL2 kinase activity reduces neuroinflammation and rescues synapse loss, brain volume loss, and behavioral deficits. Single-cell RNA sequencing analysis indicates that protection in the tauopathy model was associated with reductions in activated microglia subpopulations as well as infiltrating peripheral immune cells. Overall, using various models, we find that TPL2 kinase activity can promote multiple harmful consequences of microglial activation in the brain including cytokine release, iNOS (inducible nitric oxide synthase) induction, astrocyte activation, and immune cell infiltration. Consequently, inhibiting TPL2 kinase activity could represent a potential therapeutic strategy in neurodegenerative conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169905423
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.83451