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Microglial cytokines poison neuronal autophagy via CCR5, a druggable target.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Festa, Beatrice Paola 
Siddiqi, Farah H 
Jimenez-Sanchez, Maria 
Rubinsztein, David C  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5002-5263

Abstract

In the prodromal phase of neurodegenerative diseases, microglia switch to an activated state resulting in increased secretion of pro-inflammatory factors. We reported that C - C chemokine ligand 3 (CCL3), C - C chemokine ligand 4 (CCL4) and C - C chemokine ligand 5 (CCL5) contained in the secretome of activated microglia inhibit neuronal autophagy via a non-cell autonomous mechanism. These chemokines bind and activate neuronal C - C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5), which, in turn, promotes phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) - protein kinase B (PKB, or AKT) - mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway activation, which inhibits autophagy, thus causing the accumulation of aggregate-prone proteins in the cytoplasm of neurons. The levels of CCR5 and its chemokine ligands are increased in the brains of pre-manifesting Huntington disease (HD) and tauopathy mouse models. CCR5 accumulation might be due to a self-amplifying mechanism, since CCR5 is a substrate of autophagy and CCL5-CCR5-mediated autophagy inhibition impairs CCR5 degradation. Furthermore, pharmacological, or genetic inhibition of CCR5 rescues mTORC1-autophagy dysfunction and improves neurodegeneration in HD and tauopathy mouse models, suggesting that CCR5 hyperactivation is a pathogenic signal driving the progression of these diseases.

Description

Keywords

CCR5, Huntington disease, Tau, autophagy, maraviroc, microglia, Animals, Humans, Mice, Autophagy, Cytokines, Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1, Microglia, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Neurons, Receptors, CCR5, Signal Transduction

Journal Title

Autophagy

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1554-8627
1554-8635

Volume Title

Publisher

Informa UK Limited
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (095317/Z/11/Z)
We are grateful to Alzheimer’s Research UK, the UK Dementia Research Institute (funded by the MRC, Alzheimer’s Research UK and the Alzheimer’s Society) (to D.C.R.), The Tau Consortium, an anonymous donation to the Cambridge Centre for Parkinson-Plus, the Wellcome Trust (095317/Z/11/Z) and NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Center (NIHR203312) for funding.