Abstract
Cathepsin S (CS) is a lysosomal/endosomal cysteine protease especially expressed in cells of a mononuclear lineage including microglia. To better understand the role of CS in microglia, we investigated microglial responses after a facial nerve axotomy in CS-deficient (CS-/-) and wild-type mice. Microglia in both groups accumulated in the facial motor nucleus following axotomy. However, the mean number of microglia in CS-/-mice on the axotomized side was significantly smaller than that in wild-type mice. Microglia were found to adhere to injured motoneurons in wild-type mice, whereas microglia abutted on injured motoneurons without spreading on their surface in CS-/- mice. At the same time, the axotomy-induced down-regulation of tenasin-R, an antiadhesive perineuronal net for microglia, was partially abrogated in CS-/- mice. Primary cultured microglia prepared from CS-/- mice showed that CS deficiency caused significant suppression of migration and transmigration of microglia. In CS-/- mice, impaired recruitments of circulating monocytes and T lymphocytes and reduced expression of the class II major compatibility complex on the axotomized side were observed. Interestingly, cathepsin B, a typical lysosomal cysteine protease, was markedly expressed on the axotomized side in CS-/- but not in wild-type microglia. Finally, we compared axotomy-induced neuronal death in the two groups and found that the percentage of motoneurons that survived in CS-/- mice was significantly smaller than that in wildtype mice. The present study strongly suggests that CS plays a role in the migration and activation of microglia to protect facial motoneurons against axotomy-induced injury.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 2196-2206 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Journal of Neuroscience Research |
Volume | 85 |
Issue number | 10 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2007 Aug 1 |
Keywords
- Cathepsin B
- Cathepsin S-deficient mice
- Facial nerve axotomy
- Microglia
- Motoneuron survival
- Transmigration
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience