Nature Communications (Jul 2024)

Adenosine triggers early astrocyte reactivity that provokes microglial responses and drives the pathogenesis of sepsis-associated encephalopathy in mice

  • Qilin Guo,
  • Davide Gobbo,
  • Na Zhao,
  • Hong Zhang,
  • Nana-Oye Awuku,
  • Qing Liu,
  • Li-Pao Fang,
  • Tanja M. Gampfer,
  • Markus R. Meyer,
  • Renping Zhao,
  • Xianshu Bai,
  • Shan Bian,
  • Anja Scheller,
  • Frank Kirchhoff,
  • Wenhui Huang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50466-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Molecular pathways mediating systemic inflammation entering the brain parenchyma to induce sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) remain elusive. Here, we report that in mice during the first 6 hours of peripheral lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-evoked systemic inflammation (6 hpi), the plasma level of adenosine quickly increased and enhanced the tone of central extracellular adenosine which then provoked neuroinflammation by triggering early astrocyte reactivity. Specific ablation of astrocytic Gi protein-coupled A1 adenosine receptors (A1ARs) prevented this early reactivity and reduced the levels of inflammatory factors (e.g., CCL2, CCL5, and CXCL1) in astrocytes, thereby alleviating microglial reaction, ameliorating blood-brain barrier disruption, peripheral immune cell infiltration, neuronal dysfunction, and depression-like behaviour in the mice. Chemogenetic stimulation of Gi signaling in A1AR-deficent astrocytes at 2 and 4 hpi of LPS injection could restore neuroinflammation and depression-like behaviour, highlighting astrocytes rather than microglia as early drivers of neuroinflammation. Our results identify early astrocyte reactivity towards peripheral and central levels of adenosine as an important pathway driving SAE and highlight the potential of targeting A1ARs for therapeutic intervention.