作者
Yue Gao,Yujuan Hong,Lihong Huang,Shuang Zheng,Haibin Zhang,Shihua Wang,Yi Yao,Yini Zhao,Lin Zhu,Qiang Xu,Xuhui Chai,Yuanyuan Zeng,Yuzhe Zeng,Liangkai Zheng,Yulin Zhou,Hong Luo,Xian Zhang,Hongfeng Zhang,Ying Zhou,Guo Fu,Hao Sun,Timothy Y. Huang,Qiuyang Zheng,Huaxi Xu,Xin Wang
摘要
Down syndrome (DS) is a neurological disorder with multiple immune-related symptoms; however, crosstalk between the CNS and peripheral immune system remains unexplored. Using parabiosis and plasma infusion, we found that blood-borne factors drive synaptic deficits in DS. Proteomic analysis revealed elevation of β2-microglobulin (B2M), a major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) component, in human DS plasma. Systemic administration of B2M in wild-type mice led to synaptic and memory defects similar to those observed in DS mice. Moreover, genetic ablation of B2m or systemic administration of an anti-B2M antibody counteracts synaptic impairments in DS mice. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that B2M antagonizes NMDA receptor (NMDAR) function through interactions with the GluN1-S2 loop; blocking B2M-NMDAR interactions using competitive peptides restores NMDAR-dependent synaptic function. Our findings identify B2M as an endogenous NMDAR antagonist and reveal a pathophysiological role for circulating B2M in NMDAR dysfunction in DS and related cognitive disorders.