| Literature DB >> 34616039 |
Maya K Weigel1, Priya Prakash2, Kevin A Guttenplan1,3, Prageeth R Wijewardhane2, Philip Hasel4, Uriel Rufen-Blanchette4, Alexandra E Münch1, Jacob A Blum3, Jonathan Fine2, Mikaela C Neal5, Kimberley D Bruce5, Aaron D Gitler3, Gaurav Chopra2,6,7,8,9, Shane A Liddelow10,11,12,13, Ben A Barres1.
Abstract
Astrocytes regulate the response of the central nervous system to disease and injury and have been hypothesized to actively kill neurons in neurodegenerative disease1-6. Here we report an approach to isolate one component of the long-sought astrocyte-derived toxic factor5,6. Notably, instead of a protein, saturated lipids contained in APOE and APOJ lipoparticles mediate astrocyte-induced toxicity. Eliminating the formation of long-chain saturated lipids by astrocyte-specific knockout of the saturated lipid synthesis enzyme ELOVL1 mitigates astrocyte-mediated toxicity in vitro as well as in a model of acute axonal injury in vivo. These results suggest a mechanism by which astrocytes kill cells in the central nervous system.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34616039 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03960-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962