Neutrophil-inflicted vasculature damage suppresses immune-mediated optic nerve regeneration
Publication information:
Passino R, Finneran M, Hafner H, Feng Q, Huffman L, Zhao XF, Johnson C, Kawaguchi R, Oses-Prieto J, Burlingame A, Geschwind D, Benowitz L, Giger R. Neutrophil-inflicted vasculature damage suppresses immune-mediated optic nerve regeneration.
Cell Rep. 2024;43(3):113931. PMID: 38492223
Abstract
In adult mammals, injured retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) fail to spontaneously regrow severed axons, resulting in permanent visual deficits. Robust axon growth, however, is observed after intra-ocular injection of particulate β-glucan isolated from yeast. Blood-borne myeloid cells rapidly respond to β-glucan, releasing numerous pro-regenerative factors. Unfortunately, the pro-regenerative effects are undermined by retinal damage inflicted by an overactive immune system. Here, we demonstrate that protection of the inflamed vasculature promotes immune-mediated RGC regeneration. In the absence of microglia, leakiness of the blood-retina barrier increases, pro-inflammatory neutrophils are elevated, and RGC regeneration is reduced. Functional ablation of the complement receptor 3 (CD11b/integrin-αM), but not the complement components C1q-/- or C3-/-, reduces ocular inflammation, protects the blood-retina barrier, and enhances RGC regeneration. Selective targeting of neutrophils with anti-Ly6G does not increase axogenic neutrophils but protects the blood-retina barrier and enhances RGC regeneration. Together, these findings reveal that protection of the inflamed vasculature promotes neuronal regeneration.