Complement receptor 3-mediated neurotoxic glial activation contributes to rotenone-induced cognitive decline in mice.
Wang. Qinghui Q; Ruan. Zhengzheng Z; Jing. Lu L; Guo. Ziyang Z; Zhang. Xiaomeng X; Liu. Jianing J; Tian. Lu L; Sun. Wei W; Song. Sheng S; Hong. Jau-Shyong JS; Shih. Yen-Yu Ian YI; Hou. Liyan L; Wang. Qingshan Q
Key Findings
- Rotenone increases CR3 levels in mouse brain regions linked to memory
- LL‑37 activation of CR3 makes rotenone‑induced brain inflammation and cognitive decline worse
- Removing or pharmacologically inhibiting CR3 protects mice from neurodegeneration and improves cognition
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, the study suggests that stimulating CR3 (e.g., with LL‑37) could be harmful for brain health, especially in toxin‑exposed contexts. Targeting CR3 with inhibitors might be a future strategy for protecting cognition, but no ready‑to‑use supplement or protocol is available yet.
Summary
In mice, a pesticide called rotenone causes brain inflammation and memory loss, and this gets worse when a brain receptor called CR3 is activated by the peptide LL‑37. Mice that lack CR3 or are given a drug that blocks CR3 show less brain damage and better memory, even after problems have started.
Abstract
Microglia-mediated chronic neuroinflammation has been associated with cognitive decline induced by rotenone, a well-known neurotoxic pesticide used in agriculture. However, the mechanisms remain unclear. This work aimed to elucidate the role of complement receptor 3 (CR3), a highly expressed receptor in microglia, in cognitive deficits induced by rotenone. Rotenone up-regulated the expression of CR3 in the hippocampus and cortex area of mice. CR3 deficiency markedly ameliorated rotenone-induced cognitive impairments, neurodegeneration and phosphorylation (Ser129) of α-synuclein in mice. CR3 deficiency also attenuated rotenone-stimulated microglial M1 activation. In microglial cells, siRNA-mediated knockdown of CR3 impeded, while CR3 activation induced by LL-37 exacerbated, rotenone-induced microglial M1 activation. Mechanistically, CR3 deficiency blocked rotenone-induced activation of nuclear factor κB (NF-κB), signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1) and STAT3 signaling pathways. Pharmacological inhibition of NF-κB or STAT3 but not STAT1 was confirmed to suppress microglial M1 activation elicited by rotenone. Further study revealed that CR3 deficiency or knockdown also reduced rotenone-induced expression of C3, an A1 astrocyte marker, and production of microglial C1q, TNFα and IL-1α, a cocktail for activated microglia to induce neurotoxic A1 astrocytes, via NF-κB and STAT3 pathways. Finally, a small molecule modulator of CR3 efficiently mitigated rotenone-elicited cognitive deficits in mice even administered after the establishment of cognitive dysfunction. Taken together, our findings demonstrated that CR3 is a key factor in mediating neurotoxic glial activation and subsequent cognitive impairments in rotenone-treated mice, giving novel insights into the immunopathogenesis of cognitive impairments in pesticide-related Parkinsonism.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-10-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.ecoenv.2023.115550
13
56