Arresting the bad seed: HDAC3 regulates proliferation of different microglia after ischemic stroke

Author:

Zhang Yue1ORCID,Li Jiaying1ORCID,Zhao Yongfang1ORCID,Huang Yichen1ORCID,Shi Ziyu1ORCID,Wang Hailian1,Cao Hui1ORCID,Wang Chenran1,Wang Yana1,Chen Di1ORCID,Chen Shuning1ORCID,Meng Shan1,Wang Yangfan1,Zhu Yueyan1,Jiang Yan1,Gong Ye1ORCID,Gao Yanqin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Critical Care Medicine of Huashan Hospital, State Key Laboratory of Medical Neurobiology, MOE Frontiers Center for Brain Science, and Institutes of Brain Science, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.

Abstract

The accumulation of self-renewed polarized microglia in the penumbra is a critical neuroinflammatory process after ischemic stroke, leading to secondary demyelination and neuronal loss. Although known to regulate tumor cell proliferation and neuroinflammation, HDAC3’s role in microgliosis and microglial polarization remains unclear. We demonstrated that microglial HDAC3 knockout (HDAC3-miKO) ameliorated poststroke long-term functional and histological outcomes. RNA-seq analysis revealed mitosis as the primary process affected in HDAC3-deficent microglia following stroke. Notably, HDAC3-miKO specifically inhibited proliferation of proinflammatory microglia without affecting anti-inflammatory microglia, preventing microglial transition to a proinflammatory state. Moreover, ATAC-seq showed that HDAC3-miKO induced closing of accessible regions enriched with PU.1 motifs. Overexpressing microglial PU.1 via an AAV approach reversed HDAC3-miKO–induced proliferation inhibition and protective effects on ischemic stroke, indicating PU.1 as a downstream molecule that mediates HDAC3’s effects on stroke. These findings uncovered that HDAC3/PU.1 axis, which mediated differential proliferation-related reprogramming in different microglia populations, drove poststroke inflammatory state transition, and contributed to pathophysiology of ischemic stroke.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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