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Transcriptional profiling and therapeutic targeting of oxidative stress in neuroinflammation
- Mendiola, Andrew S;
- Ryu, Jae Kyu;
- Bardehle, Sophia;
- Meyer-Franke, Anke;
- Ang, Kenny Kean-Hooi;
- Wilson, Chris;
- Baeten, Kim M;
- Hanspers, Kristina;
- Merlini, Mario;
- Thomas, Sean;
- Petersen, Mark A;
- Williams, Alexander;
- Thomas, Reuben;
- Rafalski, Victoria A;
- Meza-Acevedo, Rosa;
- Tognatta, Reshmi;
- Yan, Zhaoqi;
- Pfaff, Samuel J;
- Machado, Michael R;
- Bedard, Catherine;
- Rios Coronado, Pamela E;
- Jiang, Xiqian;
- Wang, Jin;
- Pleiss, Michael A;
- Green, Ari J;
- Zamvil, Scott S;
- Pico, Alexander R;
- Bruneau, Benoit G;
- Arkin, Michelle R;
- Akassoglou, Katerina
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-020-0654-0Abstract
Oxidative stress is a central part of innate immune-induced neurodegeneration. However, the transcriptomic landscape of central nervous system (CNS) innate immune cells contributing to oxidative stress is unknown, and therapies to target their neurotoxic functions are not widely available. Here, we provide the oxidative stress innate immune cell atlas in neuroinflammatory disease and report the discovery of new druggable pathways. Transcriptional profiling of oxidative stress-producing CNS innate immune cells identified a core oxidative stress gene signature coupled to coagulation and glutathione-pathway genes shared between a microglia cluster and infiltrating macrophages. Tox-seq followed by a microglia high-throughput screen and oxidative stress gene network analysis identified the glutathione-regulating compound acivicin, with potent therapeutic effects that decrease oxidative stress and axonal damage in chronic and relapsing multiple sclerosis models. Thus, oxidative stress transcriptomics identified neurotoxic CNS innate immune populations and may enable discovery of selective neuroprotective strategies.
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