Central nervous system-associated macrophages modulate the immune response following stroke in aged mice.

Le 01 Août 2024

Auteur : Levard D, Seillier C, Bellemain-Sagnard M, Fournier AP, Lemarchand E, Dembech C, Riou G, McDade K, Smith C, McQuaid C, Montagne A, Amann L, Prinz M, Vivien D, Rubio M

Année : 2024

Journal : Nat Neurosci 1546-1726

PubMed Id : 38961228

Age is a major nonmodifiable risk factor for ischemic stroke. Central nervous system-associated macrophages (CAMs) are resident immune cells located along the brain vasculature at the interface between the blood circulation and the parenchyma. By using a clinically relevant thromboembolic stroke model in young and aged male mice and corresponding human tissue samples, we show that during aging, CAMs acquire a central role in orchestrating immune cell trafficking after stroke through the specific modulation of adhesion molecules by endothelial cells. The absence of CAMs provokes increased leukocyte infiltration (neutrophils and CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes) and neurological dysfunction after stroke exclusively in aged mice. Major histocompatibility complex class II, overexpressed by CAMs during aging, plays a significant role in the modulation of immune responses to stroke. We demonstrate that during aging, CAMs become central coordinators of the neuroimmune response that ensure a long-term fine-tuning of the immune responses triggered by stroke.