Neutrophil-microglia interaction drives motor dysfunction in a neuromyelitis optica model induced by subarachnoid AQP4-IgG.

Qi F, Lennon VA, Zhao S, Guo Y, Ding H et al.
J Clin Invest 2026
Open on PubMed

Neutrophils and neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) contribute to early neuromyelitis optica (NMO) histopathology initiated by IgG targeting astrocytic aquaporin-4 (AQP4) water channels. Yet, the mechanisms underlying neutrophil recruitment and their pathogenic roles in disease progression remain unclear. To investigate molecular-cellular events preceding classical complement cascade activation in a mouse NMO model, we continuously infused, via spinal subarachnoid route, a non-complement-activating mouse monoclonal AQP4-IgG. Parenchymal infiltration of netting neutrophils containing C5a ensued with microglial activation and motor impairment but no blood-brain barrier leakage. Motor impairment and neuronal dysfunction both reversed when AQP4-IgG infusion stopped. Two-photon microscopy and electron microscopy-based reconstructions revealed physical interaction of infiltrating neutrophils with microglia. Ablation of either peripheral neutrophils or microglia attenuated the motor deficit, highlighting their synergistic pathogenic roles. Of note, mice lacking complement receptor C5aR1 exhibited reduction in neutrophil infiltration, microglial lysosomal activation, neuronal lipid droplet burden, and motor impairment. Pharmacological inhibition of C5aR1 recapitulated this protection. Immunohistochemical analysis of an NMO patient's spinal cord revealed disease-associated microglia surrounding motor neurons in nondestructive lesions. Our study identifies neutrophil-derived C5a signaling through microglial C5aR1 as a key early driver of reversible motor neuron dysfunction in the precytolytic phase of NMO.

8 Figures Extracted
Figure 1
Figure 1 PMC
Neutrophils infiltrating and extruding extracellular traps (NETosis) in NMO mouse spinal cord. ( A ) Experimental design: catheter inserted via cister...
Figure 2
Figure 2 PMC
Neutrophil-microglial contacts in lumbar parenchyma, AQP4-IgG infusion day 3. ( A ) Confocal image identifies putatively interacting microglia (Cx3cr1...
Figure 3
Figure 3 PMC
Microglial activation and motor impairment by AQP4-IgG requires CNS-infiltrating neutrophils. ( A ) Timeline for injecting neutrophil-depleting anti-L...
Figure 4
Figure 4 PMC
Neutrophil-derived C5a enhances NET production and activates microglia via C5aR1 signaling. ( A and B ) Gray matter of AQP4-IgG recipient mice, C5a ...
Figure 5
Figure 5 PMC
C5ar1 deficiency abrogates downstream microglial activation response to AQP4-IgG infusion. ( A ) Representative confocal images from lumbar cord of w...
Figure 6
Figure 6 PMC
C5ar1 deficiency ameliorates neuronal dysfunction and lipid droplet accumulation in motor neurons. ( A ) Experimental design: mice were infused conti...
Figure 7
Figure 7 PMC
Microglia are required for pathogenic AQP4-IgG to upregulate CXCL1 in cultured mouse astrocytes. ( A ) Experimental design of the IgG binding to AQP4 ...
Figure 8
Figure 8 PMC
Disease-associated microglia interact with motor neurons in an NMO mouse model. ( A ) Representative immunostained images of motor neuron–associated (...