AI Article Synopsis

  • Microglia are crucial for protecting the central nervous system and removing harmful substances, but their function declines with age, leading to increased neurological issues like multiple sclerosis.
  • Researchers used advanced techniques on spinal cord samples from young and middle-aged mice to understand how aging affects microglial behavior, particularly after injury.
  • They discovered that an increase in osteopontin in older mice worsens neurodegeneration, while reducing this protein can help alleviate inflammation and damage in aging-related conditions.

Article Abstract

Microglia are the immune sentinels of the central nervous system with protective roles such as the removal of neurotoxic oxidized phosphatidylcholines (OxPCs). As aging alters microglial function and elevates neurological disability in diseases such as multiple sclerosis, defining aging-associated factors that cause microglia to lose their custodial properties or even become injurious can help to restore their homeostasis. We used single-cell and spatial RNA sequencing in the spinal cord of young (6-week-old) and middle-aged (52-week-old) mice to determine aging-driven microglial reprogramming at homeostasis or after OxPC injury. We identified numerous aging-associated microglial transcripts including osteopontin elevated in OxPC-treated 52-week-old mice, which correlated with greater neurodegeneration. Osteopontin delivery into the spinal cords of 6-week-old mice worsened OxPC lesions, while its knockdown in 52-week-old lesions attenuated microglial inflammation and axon loss. Thus, elevation of osteopontin and other transcripts in aging disorders including multiple sclerosis perturbs microglial functions contributing to aging-associated neurodegeneration.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43587-022-00205-zDOI Listing

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