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Klotho controls the brain-immune system interface in the choroid plexus.


ABSTRACT: Located within the brain's ventricles, the choroid plexus produces cerebrospinal fluid and forms an important barrier between the central nervous system and the blood. For unknown reasons, the choroid plexus produces high levels of the protein klotho. Here, we show that these levels naturally decline with aging. Depleting klotho selectively from the choroid plexus via targeted viral vector-induced knockout in Klotho flox/flox mice increased the expression of multiple proinflammatory factors and triggered macrophage infiltration of this structure in young mice, simulating changes in unmanipulated old mice. Wild-type mice infected with the same Cre recombinase-expressing virus did not show such alterations. Experimental depletion of klotho from the choroid plexus enhanced microglial activation in the hippocampus after peripheral injection of mice with lipopolysaccharide. In primary cultures, klotho suppressed thioredoxin-interacting protein-dependent activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome in macrophages by enhancing fibroblast growth factor 23 signaling. We conclude that klotho functions as a gatekeeper at the interface between the brain and immune system in the choroid plexus. Klotho depletion in aging or disease may weaken this barrier and promote immune-mediated neuropathogenesis.

SUBMITTER: Zhu L 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6275534 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Klotho controls the brain-immune system interface in the choroid plexus.

Zhu Lei L   Stein Liana R LR   Kim Daniel D   Ho Kaitlyn K   Yu Gui-Qiu GQ   Zhan Lihong L   Larsson Tobias E TE   Mucke Lennart L  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20181109 48


Located within the brain's ventricles, the choroid plexus produces cerebrospinal fluid and forms an important barrier between the central nervous system and the blood. For unknown reasons, the choroid plexus produces high levels of the protein klotho. Here, we show that these levels naturally decline with aging. Depleting klotho selectively from the choroid plexus via targeted viral vector-induced knockout in <i>Klotho</i><sup>flox/flox</sup> mice increased the expression of multiple proinflamma  ...[more]

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