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Cell Rep
Published

Molecular and functional properties of cortical astrocytes during peripherally induced neuroinflammation.

Authors

Blanca Diaz-Castro, Alexander M Bernstein, Giovanni Coppola, Michael V Sofroniew, Baljit S Khakh

Abstract

Astrocytic contributions to neuroinflammation are widely implicated in disease, but they remain incompletely explored. We assess medial prefrontal cortex (PFC) and visual cortex (VCX) astrocyte and whole-tissue gene expression changes in mice following peripherally induced neuroinflammation triggered by a systemic bacterial endotoxin, lipopolysaccharide, which produces sickness-related behaviors, including anhedonia. Neuroinflammation-mediated behavioral changes and astrocyte-specific gene expression alterations peak when anhedonia is greatest and then reverse to normal. Notably, region-specific molecular identities of PFC and VCX astrocytes are largely maintained during reactivity changes. Gene pathway analyses reveal alterations of diverse cell signaling pathways, including changes in cell-cell interactions of multiple cell types that may underlie the central effects of neuroinflammation. Certain astrocyte molecular signatures accompanying neuroinflammation are shared with changes reported in Alzheimer's disease and mouse models. However, we find no evidence of altered neuronal survival or function in the PFC even when neuroinflammation-induced astrocyte reactivity and behavioral changes are significant.

PMID:34380036 | DOI:S2211-1247(21)00938-4

UK DRI Authors

Dr Blanca Diaz Castro profile picture

Dr Blanca Díaz-Castro

Group Leader

Understanding the molecular and cellular mechanisms that link brain blood vessel dysfunction and dementia

Dr Blanca Díaz-Castro