Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience (Sep 2021)

Conditional Deletion of EphA4 on Cx3cr1-Expressing Microglia Fails to Influence Histopathological Outcome and Blood Brain Barrier Disruption Following Brain Injury

  • Eman Soliman,
  • Eman Soliman,
  • Jatia Mills,
  • Jing Ju,
  • Alexandra M. Kaloss,
  • Erwin Kristobal Gudenschwager Basso,
  • Nathalie Groot,
  • Colin Kelly,
  • Elizabeth A. Kowalski,
  • Mohamed Elhassanny,
  • Michael Chen,
  • Xia Wang,
  • Michelle H. Theus,
  • Michelle H. Theus,
  • Michelle H. Theus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2021.747770
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Erythropoietin-producing human hepatocellular receptors play a major role in central nervous system injury. Preclinical and clinical studies revealed the upregulation of erythropoietin-producing human hepatocellular A4 (EphA4) receptors in the brain after acute traumatic brain injury. We have previously reported that Cx3cr1-expressing cells in the peri-lesion show high levels of EphA4 after the induction of controlled cortical impact (CCI) injury in mice. Cx3cr1 is a fractalkine receptor expressed on both resident microglia and peripheral-derived macrophages. The current study aimed to determine the role of microglial-specific EphA4 in CCI-induced damage. We used Cx3cr1CreER/+ knock-in/knock-out mice, which express EYFP in Cx3cr1-positive cells to establish microglia, EphA4-deficient mice following 1-month tamoxifen injection. Consistent with our previous findings, induction of CCI in wild-type (WT) Cx3cr1CreER/+EphA4+/+ mice increased EphA4 expression on EYFP-positive cells in the peri-lesion. To distinguish between peripheral-derived macrophages and resident microglia, we exploited GFP bone marrow-chimeric mice and found that CCI injury increased EphA4 expression in microglia (TMEM119+GFP–) using immunohistochemistry. Using Cx3cr1CreER/+EphA4f/f (KO) mice, we observed that the EphA4 mRNA transcript was undetected in microglia but remained present in whole blood when compared to WT. Finally, we found no difference in lesion volume or blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption between WT and KO mice at 3 dpi. Our data demonstrate a nonessential role of microglial EphA4 in the acute histopathological outcome in response to CCI.

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