The intracellular domain of CX3CL1 regulates adult neurogenesis and Alzheimer’s amyloid pathology

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Abstract

The membrane-anchored CX3CL1 is best known to exert its signaling function through binding its receptor CX3CR1. This study demonstrates a novel function that CX3CL1 exerts. CX3CL1 is sequentially cleaved by α-, β-, and γ-secretase, and the released CX3CL1 intracellular domain (CX3CL1-ICD) would translocate into the cell nucleus to alter gene expression due to this back-signaling function. Amyloid deposition and neuronal loss were significantly reduced when membrane-anchored CX3CL1 C-terminal fragment (CX3CL1-ct) was overexpressed in Alzheimer’s 5xFAD mouse model. The reversal of neuronal loss in 5xFAD can be attributed to increased neurogenesis by CX3CL1-ICD, as revealed by morphological and unbiased RNA-sequencing analyses. Mechanistically, this CX3CL1 back-signal likely enhances developmental and adult neurogenesis through the TGFβ2/3-Smad2/3 pathway and other genes important for neurogenesis. Induction of CX3CL1 back-signaling may not only be a promising novel mechanism to replenish neuronal loss but also for reducing amyloid deposition for Alzheimer’s treatment.

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Fan, Q., Gayen, M., Singh, N., Gao, F., He, W., Hu, X., … Yan, R. (2019). The intracellular domain of CX3CL1 regulates adult neurogenesis and Alzheimer’s amyloid pathology. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 216(8), 1891–1903. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20182238

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