Functional hypoxia drives neuroplasticity and neurogenesis via brain erythropoietin

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Abstract

Erythropoietin (EPO), named after its role in hematopoiesis, is also expressed in mammalian brain. In clinical settings, recombinant EPO treatment has revealed a remarkable improvement of cognition, but underlying mechanisms have remained obscure. Here, we show with a novel line of reporter mice that cognitive challenge induces local/endogenous hypoxia in hippocampal pyramidal neurons, hence enhancing expression of EPO and EPO receptor (EPOR). High-dose EPO administration, amplifying auto/paracrine EPO/EPOR signaling, prompts the emergence of new CA1 neurons and enhanced dendritic spine densities. Single-cell sequencing reveals rapid increase in newly differentiating neurons. Importantly, improved performance on complex running wheels after EPO is imitated by exposure to mild exogenous/inspiratory hypoxia. All these effects depend on neuronal expression of the Epor gene. This suggests a model of neuroplasticity in form of a fundamental regulatory circle, in which neuronal networks—challenged by cognitive tasks—drift into transient hypoxia, thereby triggering neuronal EPO/EPOR expression.

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Wakhloo, D., Scharkowski, F., Curto, Y., Javed Butt, U., Bansal, V., Steixner-Kumar, A. A., … Ehrenreich, H. (2020). Functional hypoxia drives neuroplasticity and neurogenesis via brain erythropoietin. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15041-1

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