6533b829fe1ef96bd128ac66

RESEARCH PRODUCT

CD14 is a key organizer of microglial responses to CNS infection and injury

Alexander GötzUlla GertigTommy RegenTommy RegenJosef PrillerHannelore EhrenreichHendrikus BoddekeChristin FritscheWolfgang BrückMarco PrinzChotima BöttcherSandra RibesChristine StadelmannSimone RolfesMartin S. WeberDenise Van RossumClaudia WrzosHana JanovaInge R. HoltmanKonrad GronkeTobias PukropNasrin SaiepourBart J. L. EggenGabriela Salinas-riesterJonathan R. WeinsteinJens KopatzAnne-sophie ErnstUwe-karsten HanischUwe-karsten Hanisch

subject

0301 basic medicineChemokineToll-like receptorInnate immune systembiologyMicrogliaCD14Proinflammatory cytokine03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structureImmune systemNeurologyImmunologybiology.proteinTLR4medicine

description

Microglia, innate immune cells of the CNS, sense infection and damage through overlapping receptor sets. Toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 recognizes bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and multiple injury-associated factors. We show that its co-receptor CD14 serves three non-redundant functions in microglia. First, it confers an up to 100-fold higher LPS sensitivity compared to peripheral macrophages to enable efficient proinflammatory cytokine induction. Second, CD14 prevents excessive responses to massive LPS challenges via an interferon β-mediated feedback. Third, CD14 is mandatory for microglial reactions to tissue damage-associated signals. In mice, these functions are essential for balanced CNS responses to bacterial infection, traumatic and ischemic injuries, since CD14 deficiency causes either hypo- or hyperinflammation, insufficient or exaggerated immune cell recruitment or worsened stroke outcomes. While CD14 orchestrates functions of TLR4 and related immune receptors, it is itself regulated by TLR and non-TLR systems to thereby fine-tune microglial damage-sensing capacity upon infectious and non-infectious CNS challenges.

https://doi.org/10.1002/glia.22955