Interleukin-13 and its receptor are synaptic proteins involved in plasticity and neuroprotection

Shun Li(Universität Ulm), Florian olde Heuvel(Universität Ulm), Rida Rehman(Universität Ulm), Oumayma Aousji(Universität Ulm), Albrecht Froehlich(Universität Ulm), Zheng-Hui Li(Universität Ulm), Rebecca Jark(Universität Hamburg), Wanhong Zhang, Alison Conquest(The Alfred Hospital), Sarah Woelfle(Universität Ulm), Michael Schoen(Universität Ulm), Caitlin C. O ́Meara(Medical College of Wisconsin), R. Lee Reinhardt(University of Colorado Denver), David Voehringer(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Jan Kassubek(Universität Ulm), Albert C. Ludolph(Universität Ulm), Markus Huber‐Lang(Universität Ulm), Bernd Knöll(Universität Ulm), Maria Cristina Morganti-Kossmann(The Alfred Hospital), Marisa M. Brockmann(Universität Hamburg), Tobias M. Boeckers(Universität Ulm), Francesco Roselli(Universität Ulm)
Nature Communications
January 13, 2023
Cited by 89Open Access
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Abstract

Immune system molecules are expressed by neurons, yet their functions are often unknown. We have identified IL-13 and its receptor IL-13Ra1 as neuronal, synaptic proteins in mouse, rat, and human brains, whose engagement upregulates the phosphorylation of NMDAR and AMPAR subunits and, in turn, increases synaptic activity and CREB-mediated transcription. We demonstrate that increased IL-13 is a hallmark of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in male mice as well as in two distinct cohorts of human patients. We also provide evidence that IL-13 upregulation protects neurons from excitotoxic death. We show IL-13 upregulation occurring in several cohorts of human brain samples and in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Thus, IL-13 is a physiological modulator of synaptic physiology of neuronal origin, with implications for the establishment of synaptic plasticity and the survival of neurons under injury conditions. Furthermore, we suggest that the neuroprotection afforded through the upregulation of IL-13 represents an entry point for interventions in the pathophysiology of TBI.


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