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STAT6/Arg1 promotes microglia/macrophage efferocytosis and inflammation resolution in stroke mice
Wei Cai, Xuejiao Dai, Jie Chen, Jingyan Zhao, Mingyue Xu, Lili Zhang, Boyu Yang, Wenting Zhang, Marcelo Rocha, Toshimasa Nakao, Julia Kofler, Yejie Shi, R. Anne Stetler, Xiaoming Hu, Jun Chen
Wei Cai, Xuejiao Dai, Jie Chen, Jingyan Zhao, Mingyue Xu, Lili Zhang, Boyu Yang, Wenting Zhang, Marcelo Rocha, Toshimasa Nakao, Julia Kofler, Yejie Shi, R. Anne Stetler, Xiaoming Hu, Jun Chen
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Research Article Inflammation Neuroscience

STAT6/Arg1 promotes microglia/macrophage efferocytosis and inflammation resolution in stroke mice

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Abstract

Efferocytosis, or phagocytic clearance of dead/dying cells by brain-resident microglia and/or infiltrating macrophages, is instrumental for inflammation resolution and restoration of brain homeostasis after stroke. Here, we identify the signal transducer and activator of transcription 6/arginase1 (STAT6/Arg1) signaling axis as a potentially novel mechanism that orchestrates microglia/macrophage responses in the ischemic brain. Activation of STAT6 was observed in microglia/macrophages in the ischemic territory in a mouse model of stroke and in stroke patients. STAT6 deficiency resulted in reduced clearance of dead/dying neurons, increased inflammatory gene signature in microglia/macrophages, and enlarged infarct volume early after experimental stroke. All of these pathological changes culminated in an increased brain tissue loss and exacerbated long-term functional deficits. Combined in vivo analyses using BM chimeras and in vitro experiments using microglia/macrophage-neuron cocultures confirmed that STAT6 activation in both microglia and macrophages was essential for neuroprotection. Adoptive transfer of WT macrophages into STAT6-KO mice reduced accumulation of dead neurons in the ischemic territory and ameliorated brain infarction. Furthermore, decreased expression of Arg1 in STAT6–/– microglia/macrophages was responsible for impairments in efferocytosis and loss of antiinflammatory modality. Our study suggests that efferocytosis via STAT6/Arg1 modulates microglia/macrophage phenotype, accelerates inflammation resolution, and improves stroke outcomes.

Authors

Wei Cai, Xuejiao Dai, Jie Chen, Jingyan Zhao, Mingyue Xu, Lili Zhang, Boyu Yang, Wenting Zhang, Marcelo Rocha, Toshimasa Nakao, Julia Kofler, Yejie Shi, R. Anne Stetler, Xiaoming Hu, Jun Chen

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Figure 2

STAT6 deficiency exacerbates brain infarction and neuronal death after tMCAO.

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STAT6 deficiency exacerbates brain infarction and neuronal death after t...
Male WT and STAT6-KO mice were subjected to 60 minutes of tMCAO. (A) No difference in regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) between WT and STAT6-KO mice was detected. n = 6 mice per group. Scale bar: 1 mm. (B) Infarct volume at 3d (n = 10–11 mice per group) and 7d (n = 8–9 mice per group) after tMCAO was quantified in MAP2-stained (green) coronal sections. Dashed lines outline the infarct area. Scale bar: 1 mm. (C–E) Neuronal death increased in STAT6-KO brains 3d and 7d after tMCAO. (C) Representative images demonstrating TUNEL (red) colabeling with the neuronal marker NeuN (green) in infarct areas indicated in Figure 1A. Scale bar: 10 μm. (D) Quantification of NeuN+TUNEL+ neurons in cortex (CTX) and striatum (STR). (E) The reduction rate of dead/dying neurons from 3d–7d after tMCAO was calculated as described in Methods. n=6 mice per group. **P ≤ 0.01, ***P ≤ 0.001 STAT6-KO vs. WT, Student’s t test.

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