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Journal ArticleDOI

MicroRNA profiling of multiple sclerosis lesions identifies modulators of the regulatory protein CD47

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TLDR
It is suggested that microRNA dysregulated in multiple sclerosis lesions reduce CD47 in brain resident cells, releasing macrophages from inhibitory control, thereby promoting phagocytosis of myelin and have broad implications for microRNA-regulated macrophage activation in inflammatory diseases.
Abstract
We established microRNA profiles from active and inactive multiple sclerosis lesions. Using laser capture microdissection from multiple sclerosis lesions to pool single cells and in vitro cultures, we assigned differentially expressed microRNA to specific cell types. Astrocytes contained all 10 microRNA that were most strongly upregulated in active multiple sclerosis lesions, including microRNA-155, which is known to modulate immune responses in different ways but so far had not been assigned to central nervous system resident cells. MicroRNA-155 was expressed in human astrocytes in situ, and further induced with cytokines in human astrocytes in vitro. This was confirmed with astrocyte cultures from microRNA-155-|-lacZ mice. We matched microRNA upregulated in phagocytically active multiple sclerosis lesions with downregulated protein coding transcripts. This converged on CD47, which functions as a 'don't eat me' signal inhibiting macrophage activity. Three microRNA upregulated in active multiple sclerosis lesions (microRNA-34a, microRNA-155 and microRNA-326) targeted the 3'-untranslated region of CD47 in reporter assays, with microRNA-155 even at two distinct sites. Our findings suggest that microRNA dysregulated in multiple sclerosis lesions reduce CD47 in brain resident cells, releasing macrophages from inhibitory control, thereby promoting phagocytosis of myelin. This mechanism may have broad implications for microRNA-regulated macrophage activation in inflammatory diseases.

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MicroRNA-155 Promotes Autoimmune Inflammation by Enhancing Inflammatory T Cell Development

TL;DR: It is shown that one aspect of miR-155 function is the promotion of T cell-dependent tissue inflammation, suggesting that miR -155 might be a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of autoimmune disorders.
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The myeloid cells of the central nervous system parenchyma.

TL;DR: A microglial cell is both a glial cell of the central nervous system and a mononuclear phagocyte, which belongs to the haematopoietic system and is involved in inflammatory and immune responses.
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The blood-brain barrier in systemic inflammation

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Microglia in Alzheimer’s disease

TL;DR: The role ofmicroglia in the pathogenesis of AD and the modulation of microglia activity as a therapeutic modality will be discussed.
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Modulating inflammatory monocytes with a unique microRNA gene signature ameliorates murine ALS

TL;DR: The results suggest that recruitment of inflammatory monocytes plays an important role in disease progression and that modulation of these cells is a potential therapeutic approach.
References
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