The nuclear receptor NR4A1 serves as a neutrophil-intrinsic regulator mitigating stroke severity
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Ischemic stroke is accompanied by recruitment and activation of immune cells which play an important role in the progression of the brain damage. The nuclear receptor NR4A1 emerged as a key regulator within the inflammatory response of several immune diseases by regulating immune cell activation. In this study, we investigated the role of NR4A1 in the activation and recruitment of brain resident and peripheral immune cells after cerebral ischemia. Here, we show that NR4A1 mediates an anti-inflammatory and damage-limiting effect after stroke. This effect is largely mediated by neutrophil recruitment and importantly, NR4A1 activation with its ligand Cytosporone B improves functional outcome and reduces brain damage. Modulation of NR4A1 is therefore a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of the nuclear receptor NR4A1 in the activation and recruitment of peripheral and brain resident immune cells after cerebral ischemia and its consequences for stroke outcome. We demonstrate that NR4A1 ablation augments neutrophil activation and CNS recruitment within days after stroke thereby increasing infarct size, CNS inflammation, neuronal damage and deteriorating functional outcome. This effect is mediated via modulation of cell-intrinsic neutrophil function and maturation as illustrated by neutrophil-specific NR4A1 ablation and mixed bone-marrow chimera experiments. Notably, the NR4A1 agonist Cytosporone B reduced CNS neutrophil infiltration, infarct size and functional outcome after stroke in a bicentric preclinical stroke trial, demonstrating that NR4A1-mediated control of neutrophil reactivity is amenable to pharmacological modulation. In humans, NR4A1 expressing neutrophils are present in the peripheral blood of stroke patients and neutrophil NR4A1 expression correlates with improved long-term outcome after 3 months. Furthermore, NR4A1 expression in brain parenchyma neutrophils is negatively correlated with neuronal cell loss, illustrating a role of NR4A1 in regulating neutrophil mediated neuronal cell death in human stroke. Together our data reveal the nuclear factor NR4A1 as a brake of intrinsic neutrophil activity controlling neutrophil-mediated brain inflammation and neurotoxicity in stroke which may serve as a novel therapeutic target to limit inflammation-associated augmentation of ischemic damage after stroke.