Progranulin deficiency promotes neuroinflammation and neuron loss following toxin-induced injury

Lauren Herl Martens(Gladstone Institutes), Jiasheng Zhang(University of California, San Francisco), Sami J. Barmada(Gladstone Institutes), Ping Zhou(Gladstone Institutes), Sherry Kamiya(University of California, San Francisco), Binggui Sun(Gladstone Institutes), Sang-Won Min(Gladstone Institutes), Li Gan(Gladstone Institutes), Steven Finkbeiner(Gladstone Institutes), Eric J. Huang(University of California, San Francisco), Robert V. Farese(University of California, San Francisco)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
October 8, 2012
Cited by 319Open Access
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Abstract

Progranulin (PGRN) is a widely expressed secreted protein that is linked to inflammation. In humans, PGRN haploinsufficiency is a major inherited cause of frontotemporal dementia (FTD), but how PGRN deficiency causes neurodegeneration is unknown. Here we show that loss of PGRN results in increased neuron loss in response to injury in the CNS. When exposed acutely to 1-methyl-4-(2'-methylphenyl)-1,2,3,6-tetrahydrophine (MPTP), mice lacking PGRN (Grn⁻/⁻) showed more neuron loss and increased microgliosis compared with wild-type mice. The exacerbated neuron loss was due not to selective vulnerability of Grn⁻/⁻ neurons to MPTP, but rather to an increased microglial inflammatory response. Consistent with this, conditional mutants lacking PGRN in microglia exhibited MPTP-induced phenotypes similar to Grn⁻/⁻ mice. Selective depletion of PGRN from microglia in mixed cortical cultures resulted in increased death of wild-type neurons in the absence of injury. Furthermore, Grn⁻/⁻ microglia treated with LPS/IFN-γ exhibited an amplified inflammatory response, and conditioned media from these microglia promoted death of cultured neurons. Our results indicate that PGRN deficiency leads to dysregulated microglial activation and thereby contributes to increased neuron loss with injury. These findings suggest that PGRN deficiency may cause increased neuron loss in other forms of CNS injury accompanied by neuroinflammation.


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