作者
Jennifer E. Kim,Ryan P. Lee,Eli Yazigi,Lyla Atta,James Feghali,Ayush Pant,Aanchal Jain,Idan Levitan,Eileen Kim,Kisha Patel,Nivedha Kannapadi,Pavan P. Shah,Adnan Bibic,Zhipeng Hou,Justin M. Caplan,L. Fernando Gonzalez,Judy Huang,Risheng Xu,Jean Fan,Betty Tyler,Henry Brem,Vassiliki A. Boussiotis,Lauren L. Jantzie,Shenandoah Robinson,Raymond C. Koehler,Michael Lim,Rafael J. Tamargo,Christopher M. Jackson
摘要
Acute cerebral ischemia triggers a profound inflammatory response. While macrophages polarized to an M2-like phenotype clear debris and facilitate tissue repair, aberrant or prolonged macrophage activation is counterproductive to recovery. The inhibitory immune checkpoint Programmed Cell Death Protein 1 (PD-1) is upregulated on macrophage precursors (monocytes) in the blood after acute cerebrovascular injury. To investigate the therapeutic potential of PD-1 activation, we immunophenotyped circulating monocytes from patients and found that PD-1 expression was upregulated in the acute period after stroke. Murine studies using a temporary middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion (MCAO) model showed that intraperitoneal administration of soluble Programmed Death Ligand-1 (sPD-L1) significantly decreased brain edema and improved overall survival. Mice receiving sPD-L1 also had higher performance scores short-term, and more closely resembled sham animals on assessments of long-term functional recovery. These clinical and radiographic benefits were abrogated in global and myeloid-specific PD-1 knockout animals, confirming PD-1 + monocytes as the therapeutic target of sPD-L1. Single-cell RNA sequencing revealed that treatment skewed monocyte maturation to a non-classical Ly6Clo, CD43hi, PD-L1 + phenotype. These data support peripheral activation of PD-1 on inflammatory monocytes as a therapeutic strategy to treat neuroinflammation after acute ischemic stroke.