Ferroptosis of Microglia in Aging Human White Matter Injury

Author:

Adeniyi Philip A.1ORCID,Gong Xi1,MacGregor Ellie1,Degener‐O'Brien Kiera1,McClendon Evelyn1ORCID,Garcia Mariel1,Romero Oscar1,Russell Joshua2,Srivastava Taasin1,Miller Jeremy3,Keene C. Dirk2,Back Stephen A.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Pediatrics Oregon Health & Science University Portland OR

2. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology University of Washington School of Medicine Seattle WA

3. Allen Institute for Brain Science Seattle WA

4. Department of Neurology Oregon Health & Science University Portland OR

Abstract

ObjectiveBecause the role of white matter (WM) degenerating microglia (DM) in remyelination failure is unclear, we sought to define the core features of this novel population of aging human microglia.MethodsWe analyzed postmortem human brain tissue to define a population of DM in aging WM lesions. We used immunofluorescence staining and gene expression analysis to investigate molecular mechanisms related to the degeneration of DM.ResultsWe found that DM, which accumulated myelin debris were selectively enriched in the iron‐binding protein light chain ferritin, and accumulated PLIN2‐labeled lipid droplets. DM displayed lipid peroxidation injury and enhanced expression for TOM20, a mitochondrial translocase, and a sensor of oxidative stress. DM also displayed enhanced expression of the DNA fragmentation marker phospho‐histone H2A.X. We identified a unique set of ferroptosis‐related genes involving iron‐mediated lipid dysmetabolism and oxidative stress that were preferentially expressed in WM injury relative to gray matter neurodegeneration.InterpretationFerroptosis appears to be a major mechanism of WM injury in Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia. WM DM are a novel therapeutic target to potentially reduce the impact of WM injury and myelin loss on the progression of cognitive impairment. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:1048–1066

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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