Microglial-to-neuronal CCR5 signaling regulates autophagy in neurodegeneration

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Abstract

In neurodegenerative diseases, microglia switch to an activated state, which results in excessive secretion of pro-inflammatory factors. Our work aims to investigate how this paracrine signaling affects neuronal function. Here, we show that activated microglia mediate non-cell-autonomous inhibition of neuronal autophagy, a degradative pathway critical for the removal of toxic, aggregate-prone proteins accumulating in neurodegenerative diseases. We found that the microglial-derived CCL-3/-4/-5 bind and activate neuronal CCR5, which in turn promotes mTORC1 activation and disrupts autophagy and aggregate-prone protein clearance. CCR5 and its cognate chemokines are upregulated in the brains of pre-manifesting mouse models for Huntington's disease (HD) and tauopathy, suggesting a pathological role of this microglia-neuronal axis in the early phases of these diseases. CCR5 upregulation is self-sustaining, as CCL5-CCR5 autophagy inhibition impairs CCR5 degradation itself. Finally, pharmacological or genetic inhibition of CCR5 rescues mTORC1 hyperactivation and autophagy dysfunction, which ameliorates HD and tau pathologies in mouse models.

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Festa, B. P., Siddiqi, F. H., Jimenez-Sanchez, M., Won, H., Rob, M., Djajadikerta, A., … Rubinsztein, D. C. (2023). Microglial-to-neuronal CCR5 signaling regulates autophagy in neurodegeneration. Neuron, 111(13), 2021-2037.e12. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2023.04.006

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