CD14 is a key organizer of microglial responses to CNS infection and injury

2016 | journal article

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​CD14 is a key organizer of microglial responses to CNS infection and injury​
Janova, H. ; Böttcher, C.; Holtman, I. R.; Regen, T. ; Rossum, D. van ; Götz, A.   & Ernst, A.-S.  et al.​ (2016) 
Glia64(4) pp. 635​-649​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.22955 

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Authors
Janova, Hana ; Böttcher, Chotima; Holtman, Inge R.; Regen, Tommy ; Rossum, Denise van ; Götz, Alexander ; Ernst, Anne-Sophie ; Fritsche, Christin ; Gertig, Ulla ; Saiepour, Nasrin ; Gronke, Konrad ; Wrzos, Claudia ; Ribes, Sandra ; Rolfes, Simone; Weinstein, Jonathan; Ehrenreich, Hannelore ; Pukrop, Tobias ; Kopatz, Jens; Stadelmann, Christine ; Salinas-Riester, Gabriela ; Weber, Martin S. ; Prinz, Marco; Brück, Wolfgang ; Eggen, Bart J. L.; Boddeke, Hendrikus W. G. M.; Priller, Josef; Hanisch, Uwe-Karsten 
Abstract
Microglia, innate immune cells of the CNS, sense infection and damage through overlapping receptor sets. Toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 recognizes bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and multiple injury-associated factors. We show that its co-receptor CD14 serves three non-redundant functions in microglia. First, it confers an up to 100-fold higher LPS sensitivity compared to peripheral macrophages to enable efficient proinflammatory cytokine induction. Second, CD14 prevents excessive responses to massive LPS challenges via an interferon β-mediated feedback. Third, CD14 is mandatory for microglial reactions to tissue damage-associated signals. In mice, these functions are essential for balanced CNS responses to bacterial infection, traumatic and ischemic injuries, since CD14 deficiency causes either hypo- or hyperinflammation, insufficient or exaggerated immune cell recruitment or worsened stroke outcomes. While CD14 orchestrates functions of TLR4 and related immune receptors, it is itself regulated by TLR and non-TLR systems to thereby fine-tune microglial damage-sensing capacity upon infectious and non-infectious CNS challenges.
Issue Date
2016
Journal
Glia 
ISSN
0894-1491
Language
English

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