- Main
Proinflammatory immune cells disrupt angiogenesis and promote germinal matrix hemorrhage in prenatal human brain
- Chen, Jiapei;
- Crouch, Elizabeth E;
- Zawadzki, Miriam E;
- Jacobs, Kyle A;
- Mayo, Lakyn N;
- Choi, Jennifer Ja-Yoon;
- Lin, Pin-Yeh;
- Shaikh, Saba;
- Tsui, Jessica;
- Gonzalez-Granero, Susana;
- Waller, Shamari;
- Kelekar, Avani;
- Kang, Gugene;
- Valenzuela, Edward J;
- Birrueta, Janeth Ochoa;
- Diafos, Loukas N;
- Wedderburn-Pugh, Kaylee;
- Di Marco, Barbara;
- Xia, Wenlong;
- Han, Claudia Z;
- Coufal, Nicole G;
- Glass, Christopher K;
- Fancy, Stephen PJ;
- Alfonso, Julieta;
- Kriegstein, Arnold R;
- Oldham, Michael C;
- Garcia-Verdugo, Jose Manuel;
- Kutys, Matthew L;
- Lehtinen, Maria K;
- Combes, Alexis J;
- Huang, Eric J
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-024-01769-2Abstract
Germinal matrix hemorrhage (GMH) is a devastating neurodevelopmental condition affecting preterm infants, but why blood vessels in this brain region are vulnerable to rupture remains unknown. Here we show that microglia in prenatal mouse and human brain interact with nascent vasculature in an age-dependent manner and that ablation of these cells in mice reduces angiogenesis in the ganglionic eminences, which correspond to the human germinal matrix. Consistent with these findings, single-cell transcriptomics and flow cytometry show that distinct subsets of CD45+ cells from control preterm infants employ diverse signaling mechanisms to promote vascular network formation. In contrast, CD45+ cells from infants with GMH harbor activated neutrophils and monocytes that produce proinflammatory factors, including azurocidin 1, elastase and CXCL16, to disrupt vascular integrity and cause hemorrhage in ganglionic eminences. These results underscore the brain's innate immune cells in region-specific angiogenesis and how aberrant activation of these immune cells promotes GMH in preterm infants.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-