Microglia-specific NF-κB signaling is a critical regulator of prion-induced glial inflammation and neuronal loss

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Abstract

Prion diseases are a group of rare and fatal neurodegenerative diseases caused by the cellular prion protein, PrP C , misfolding into the infectious form, PrP Sc , which forms aggregates in the brain. This leads to activation of glial cells, neuroinflammation, and irreversible neuronal loss, however, the role of glial cells in prion disease pathogenesis and neurotoxicity is poorly understood. Microglia can phagocytose PrP Sc , leading to the release of inflammatory signaling molecules, which subsequently induce astrocyte reactivity. Animal models show highly upregulated inflammatory molecules that are a product of the Nuclear Factor-kappa B (NF-κB) signaling pathway, suggesting that this is a key regulator of inflammation in the prion-infected brain. The activation of the IκB kinase complex (IKK) by cellular stress signals is critical for NF-κB-induced transcription of a variety of genes, including pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines, and regulators of protein homeostasis and cell survival. However, the contribution of microglial IKK and NF-κB signaling in the prion-infected brain has not been evaluated. Here, we characterize a primary mixed glial cell model containing wild-type (WT) astrocytes and IKK knock-out (KO) microglia. We show that, when exposed to prion-infected brain homogenates, NF-κB-associated genes are significantly downregulated in mixed glial cultures containing IKK KO microglia. Mice with IKK KO microglia show rapid disease progression when intracranially infected with prions, including an increase in microglia and reactive astrocytes, and accelerated loss of hippocampal neurons and associated behavioral deficits. These animals display clinical signs of prion disease early and have a 22% shorter life expectancy compared to infected wild-type mice. Intriguingly, PrP Sc accumulation was significantly lower in the brains of infected animals with IKK KO microglia compared to age-matched controls, suggesting that accelerated disease is independent of PrP Sc accumulation, highlighting a glial-specific pathology.

Conversely, primary mixed glia with IKK KO microglia have significantly more PrP Sc accumulation when exposed to infected brain homogenates. Together, these findings present a critical role in NF-κB signaling from microglia in host protection suggesting that microglial IKK may be involved in sufficient clearance of prions.

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