JCI Insight (Aug 2022)

Monocyte proinflammatory phenotypic control by ephrin type A receptor 4 mediates neural tissue damage

  • Elizabeth A. Kowalski,
  • Eman Soliman,
  • Colin Kelly,
  • Erwin Kristobal Gudenschwager Basso,
  • John Leonard,
  • Kevin J. Pridham,
  • Jing Ju,
  • Alison Cash,
  • Amanda Hazy,
  • Caroline de Jager,
  • Alexandra M. Kaloss,
  • Hanzhang Ding,
  • Raymundo D. Hernandez,
  • Gabe Coleman,
  • Xia Wang,
  • Michelle L. Olsen,
  • Alicia M. Pickrell,
  • Michelle H. Theus

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 15

Abstract

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Circulating monocytes have emerged as key regulators of the neuroinflammatory milieu in a number of neuropathological disorders. Ephrin type A receptor 4 (Epha4) receptor tyrosine kinase, a prominent axon guidance molecule, has recently been implicated in the regulation of neuroinflammation. Using a mouse model of brain injury and a GFP BM chimeric approach, we found neuroprotection and a lack of significant motor deficits marked by reduced monocyte/macrophage cortical infiltration and an increased number of arginase-1+ cells in the absence of BM-derived Epha4. This was accompanied by a shift in monocyte gene profile from pro- to antiinflammatory that included increased Tek (Tie2 receptor) expression. Inhibition of Tie2 attenuated enhanced expression of M2-like genes in cultured Epha4-null monocytes/macrophages. In Epha4-BM–deficient mice, cortical-isolated GFP+ monocytes/macrophages displayed a phenotypic shift from a classical to an intermediate subtype, which displayed reduced Ly6chi concomitant with increased Ly6clo- and Tie2-expressing populations. Furthermore, clodronate liposome–mediated monocyte depletion mimicked these effects in WT mice but resulted in attenuation of phenotype in Epha4-BM–deficient mice. This demonstrates that monocyte polarization not overall recruitment dictates neural tissue damage. Thus, coordination of monocyte proinflammatory phenotypic state by Epha4 is a key regulatory step mediating brain injury.

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