Abstract

Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK), a critical component of B cell receptor signaling, has recently been implicated in regulation of the peripheral innate immune response. However, the role of BTK in microglia, the resident innate immune cells of the central nervous system, and its involvement in the pathobiology of neurodegenerative disease has not been explored. Here we found that BTK is a key regulator of microglial phagocytosis. Using potent BTK inhibitors and small interfering RNA (siRNA) against BTK, we observed that blockade of BTK activity decreased activation of phospholipase gamma 2, a recently identified genetic risk factor in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and reduced phagocytosis in rodent microglia and human monocyte-derived macrophages. Inhibition of BTK signaling also decreased microglial uptake of synaptosomes but did not have major impacts on other key microglial functions such as migration and cytokine release. Similarly, blocking BTK function ex vivo in acute brain slices reduced microglial phagocytosis and maintained numbers of resting microglia. In brain tissues from the 5xFAD mouse model of AD, levels of microglial BTK were elevated while in two gene expression datasets of post-mortem AD patient brain tissues, upregulation of BTK transcript was observed. Our study provides novel insights into the role of BTK in regulating microglial phagocytosis and uptake of synaptic structures and suggests that inhibiting microglial BTK may improve cognition in AD by preventing microglial activation and synaptic loss.Graphical Microglial-mediated synapse loss has been implicated in AD pathogenesis. Inhibition of BTK decreases activation of PLCγ2, a genetic risk factor in AD, and reduces microglial phagocytosis and uptake of synaptic structures. As such BTK inhibition may represent a therapeutic route to prevent microglial activation and synapse loss in AD

Highlights

  • Central to the B cell receptor (BCR) signaling pathway, Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase that has been well-characterized as a critical regulator of B cell development and activation (Jumaa et al 2005)

  • Data presented as mean ± s.e.m., 4 biological replicates for each condition, n = 300–350 analyzed cells per condition for phagocytosis assays, unpaired t-test, one-way ANOVA with Tukey’s post-hoc multiple comparison test, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001 versus vehicle control we sought to investigate whether BTK regulates microglial phagocytosis in the brain ex vivo

  • Data presented as mean ± s.e.m., n = 4 animals per group. g BTK transcript levels in two previously published gene expression datasets from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patient brain bulk tissues (GSE15222: temporal cortex, GSE95587: fusiform gyrus)

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Summary

Introduction

Central to the B cell receptor (BCR) signaling pathway, Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase that has been well-characterized as a critical regulator of B cell development and activation (Jumaa et al 2005). Amyloid-β (Aβ)-induced activation of TLRs and the NLRP3 (NACHT, LRR, and PYD domain-containing protein 3) inflammasome results in production and release of proinflammatory cytokines like IL-1β and genetic deletion of NLRP3 protects against Aβ pathology and cognitive dysfunction in AD mouse models (Heneka et al 2013). In this context BTK has recently been implicated as a direct regulator of NLRP3 inflammasome activation and IL-1β release in murine macrophages and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) (Ito et al 2015; Liu et al 2017)

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