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    4. In vivo CRISPR screen reveals regulation of macrophage states in neuroinflammation
    News | 02/01/2026 | Research Spotlight

    In vivo CRISPR screen reveals regulation of macrophage states in neuroinflammation

    A novel in vivo CRISPR screening approach identifies cytokine networks that control macrophage function in neuroinflammatory lesions, offering new insights into immune regulation in diseases such as multiple sclerosis.

    This is a summary of Clara de la Rosa, Arek Kendirli et al. In vivo CRISPR screen reveals regulation of macrophage states in neuroinflammation. Published in Nature Neuroscience (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41593-025-02151-6


    The challenge

    Inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system, like multiple sclerosis, involve complex macrophage responses that can both drive tissue damage and promote repair. However, the molecular signals that steer macrophages toward beneficial or detrimental states in vivo remain poorly defined.

    Our approach

    We developed an in vivo pooled CRISPR/Cas9 screening platform, targeting over 100 immune signaling genes in myeloid progenitors, and analyzed their effects directly in neuroinflammatory lesions using single-cell transcriptomics and in vivo imaging.


    Our findings

    The screen revealed that interferon-γ and TNF signaling drive pro-inflammatory macrophage programs, while TGF-β and GM-CSF promote states associated with tissue remodeling and lesion resolution. These cytokine-regulated macrophage states showed distinct transcriptional signatures that were used to probe cytokine actions in multiple sclerosis. 


    The implications

    This functional map of cytokine control over macrophage states provides targets for therapies that could limit inflammation and enhance repair and the in vivo CRISPR platform itself is a powerful tool for dissecting myeloid cell regulation in neurological disease.

    Creating SyNergies

    This work integrates expertise across SyNergy labs specializing in CRISPR technology, single-cell analysis, and neuroimmunology, highlighting the translational potential of collaborative systems neuroscience research.

    Participating Universities
     LMU logo in white
     TUM logo in white
    Partner Institutions
     Logo DZNE in white
    Helmholtz Munich logo in white 
     Logo Max Planck Gesellschaft 

    SyNergy is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) within the framework of the German Excellence Strategy (EXC 2145 SyNergy – ID 390857198). The Excellence Strategy promotes outstanding research at German universities. 

    Contact

    Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy)

    Feodor-Lynen-Str. 17
    81377 Munich
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