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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

ADAM17-deficiency on microglia but not on macrophages promotes phagocytosis and functional recovery after spinal cord injury.

Journal:
Brain, behavior, and immunity
Year:
2019
Authors:
Sommer, Daniela et al.
Affiliation:
Biomedical Research Institute
Species:
rodent

Abstract

A disintegrin and metalloproteinase 17 (ADAM17) is the major sheddase involved in the cleavage of a plethora of cytokines, cytokine receptors and growth factors, thereby playing a substantial role in inflammatory and regenerative processes after central nervous system trauma. By making use of a hypomorphic ADAM17 knockin mouse model as well as pharmacological ADAM10/ADAM17 inhibitors, we showed that ADAM17-deficiency or inhibition significantly increases clearance of apoptotic cells, promotes axon growth and improves functional recovery after spinal cord injury (SCI) in mice. Microglia-specific ADAM17-knockout (ADAM17flox-Cx3Cr1 Cre) mice also showed improved functional recovery similar to hypomorphic ADAM17 mice. In contrast, endothelial-specific (ADAM17flox-Cdh5Pacs Cre) and macrophage-specific (ADAM17flox-LysM Cre) ADAM17-knockout mice or bone marrow chimera with transplanted ADAM17-deficient macrophages, displayed no functional improvement compared to wild type mice. These data indicate that ADAM17 expression on microglia cells (and not on macrophages or endothelial cells) plays a detrimental role in inflammation and functional recovery after SCI.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30851378/