Author
Listed:
- Lena Lößlein
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg
Khalifa University of Science and Technology)
- Mathias Linnerbauer
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Finnja Zuber
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Thanos Tsaktanis
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Oliver Vandrey
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Anne Peter
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Franziska Panier
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Julia Zissler
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Vivienne Riekher
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Tobias Bäuerle
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg
University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz)
- Jannis Hanspach
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Frederik B. Laun
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Lisa Nagel
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Lisa Mészáros
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Friederike Zunke
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Jürgen Winkler
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Ulrike J. Naumann
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Nora Schwingen
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Emely Neumaier
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
- Arthur Liesz
(LMU Munich
Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy))
- Francisco Quintana
(Harvard Medical School
The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT)
- Veit Rothhammer
(Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen Nuremberg)
Abstract
After acute lesions in the central nervous system (CNS), the interaction of microglia, astrocytes, and infiltrating immune cells decides over their resolution or chronification. However, this CNS-intrinsic cross-talk is poorly characterized. Analyzing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples of Multiple Sclerosis (MS) patients as well as CNS samples of female mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), the animal model of MS, we identify microglia-derived TGFα as key factor driving recovery. Through mechanistic in vitro studies, in vivo treatment paradigms, scRNA sequencing, CRISPR-Cas9 genetic perturbation models and MRI in the EAE model, we show that together with other glial and non-glial cells, microglia secrete TGFα in a highly regulated temporospatial manner in EAE. Here, TGFα contributes to recovery by decreasing infiltrating T cells, pro-inflammatory myeloid cells, oligodendrocyte loss, demyelination, axonal damage and neuron loss even at late disease stages. In a therapeutic approach in EAE, blood-brain barrier penetrating intranasal application of TGFα attenuates pro-inflammatory signaling in astrocytes and CNS infiltrating immune cells while promoting neuronal survival and lesion resolution. Together, microglia-derived TGFα is an important mediator of glial-immune crosstalk, highlighting its therapeutic potential in resolving acute CNS inflammation.
Suggested Citation
Lena Lößlein & Mathias Linnerbauer & Finnja Zuber & Thanos Tsaktanis & Oliver Vandrey & Anne Peter & Franziska Panier & Julia Zissler & Vivienne Riekher & Tobias Bäuerle & Jannis Hanspach & Frederik B, 2025.
"TGFα controls checkpoints in CNS resident and infiltrating immune cells to promote resolution of inflammation,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-17, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-60363-7
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-60363-7
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