Journal article
Microglial IKKβ Alters Central and Peripheral Immune Activity at Distinct Time Points After Spinal Cord Injury
Glia, v 73(8), pp 1746-1766
Aug 2025
PMID: 40346894
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
After high-level spinal cord injury (SCI), persistently reactive microglia drive widespread plasticity throughout the neuraxis. Plasticity in the thoracolumbar cord, a region corresponding to the spinal sympathetic reflex (SSR) circuit, contributes to the development of sympathetic dysfunction and associated immune disorders. The transcription factor NF-κB is activated after SCI, promoting a pro-inflammatory loop by driving the expression of inflammatory mediators which further activate NF-κB signaling. We hypothesize that microglial NF-κB signaling via IKKβ modulates microglial activity, impacting central and peripheral immune activity related to the SSR circuit post-SCI. We assessed the effect of deleting canonical IKKβ in CNS-resident microglia, its impact on microglial activation, polarization, central transcriptional activity, and peripheral immune activity at 1- and 4-week post-SCI (wpi). Transcriptomic analyses reveal microglial IKKβ influences immune-related pathways in the thoracolumbar cord at 1 wpi. We show that inhibition of microglial NF-κB signaling via deletion of the activator IKKβ mitigates injury-induced increases in "proinflammatory" M1 microglia in the thoracolumbar cord at 4 wpi and increases the quantity of splenocytes at 1 wpi. This study advances our understanding of how microglial IKKβ signaling shapes the neuroimmune response and a peripheral immune organ after SCI.After high-level spinal cord injury (SCI), persistently reactive microglia drive widespread plasticity throughout the neuraxis. Plasticity in the thoracolumbar cord, a region corresponding to the spinal sympathetic reflex (SSR) circuit, contributes to the development of sympathetic dysfunction and associated immune disorders. The transcription factor NF-κB is activated after SCI, promoting a pro-inflammatory loop by driving the expression of inflammatory mediators which further activate NF-κB signaling. We hypothesize that microglial NF-κB signaling via IKKβ modulates microglial activity, impacting central and peripheral immune activity related to the SSR circuit post-SCI. We assessed the effect of deleting canonical IKKβ in CNS-resident microglia, its impact on microglial activation, polarization, central transcriptional activity, and peripheral immune activity at 1- and 4-week post-SCI (wpi). Transcriptomic analyses reveal microglial IKKβ influences immune-related pathways in the thoracolumbar cord at 1 wpi. We show that inhibition of microglial NF-κB signaling via deletion of the activator IKKβ mitigates injury-induced increases in "proinflammatory" M1 microglia in the thoracolumbar cord at 4 wpi and increases the quantity of splenocytes at 1 wpi. This study advances our understanding of how microglial IKKβ signaling shapes the neuroimmune response and a peripheral immune organ after SCI.
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Details
- Title
- Microglial IKKβ Alters Central and Peripheral Immune Activity at Distinct Time Points After Spinal Cord Injury
- Creators
- Micaela L O'ReillyMariah J Wulf - Drexel UniversityTheresa M Connors - Drexel UniversityYing Jin - Drexel UniversityFrank Bearoff - Temple UniversityJulien Bouyer - Drexel UniversitySandhya Kortagere - Drexel UniversityJohn R Bethea - George Washington UniversityVeronica J Tom (Corresponding Author) - Drexel University
- Publication Details
- Glia, v 73(8), pp 1746-1766
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Number of pages
- 21
- Grants
- Grant note
Work was funded by NIH/NINDS F31NS118841 (M.L.O.), R01NS106908 (V.J.T. and J.R.B.), R01NS111761 (V.J.T. and J.R.B.), R01NS085426 (V.J.T.), and R01NS122371 (V.J.T.). M.L.O. conducted her predoctoral studies in Drexel University's Marion Murray Spinal Cord Research Center, which is funded to support and enhance graduate student training experience by NIH/NINDS T32NS121768. Flow cytometry experiments were conducted at The Wistar Institute's Flow Cytometry Facility, which is supported by P30 CA010815 with the help of Jeffrey Faust and John Fundyga.
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Microbiology and Immunology; Biology; Neurobiology and Anatomy; College of Arts and Sciences
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:001484882800001
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-105004676489
- Other Identifier
- 991022052320504721
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Web of Science research areas
- Neurosciences