Abstract

BackgroundPhagocytosis is a key function of myeloid cells and is highly involved in brain ischemic injury. It has been scarcely studied in vivo, thus preventing a deep knowledge of the processes occurring in the ischemic environment. Structured illumination microscopy (SIM) is a superresolution technique which helps study phagocytosis, a process involving the recruitment of vesicles sized below the resolution limits of standard confocal microscopy.MethodsMice underwent permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery and were sacrificed at 48 h or 7 days after insult. Immunofluorescence for CD11b, myeloid cell membrane marker, and CD68, lysosomal marker was done in the ischemic area. Images were acquired using a SIM system and verified with SIM check. Lysosomal distribution was measured in the ischemic area by the gray level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM). SIM dataset was compared with transmission electron microscopy images of macrophages in the ischemic tissue at the same time points. Cultured microglia were stimulated with LPS to uptake 100 nm fluorescent beads and imaged by time-lapse SIM. GLCM was used to analyze bead distribution over the cytoplasm.ResultsSIM images reached a resolution of 130 nm and passed the quality control diagnose, ruling out possible artifacts. After ischemia, GLCM applied to the CD68 images showed that myeloid cells at 48 h had higher angular second moment (ASM), inverse difference moment (IDM), and lower entropy than myeloid cells at 7 days indicating higher lysosomal clustering at 48 h. At this time point, lysosomal clustering was proximal (< 700 nm) to the cell membrane indicating active target internalization, while at 7 days, it was perinuclear, consistent with final stages of phagocytosis or autophagy. Electron microscopy images indicated a similar pattern of lysosomal distribution thus validating the SIM dataset. GLCM on time-lapse SIM from phagocytic microglia cultures revealed a temporal decrease in ASM and IDM and increase in entropy, as beads were uptaken, indicating that GLCM informs on the progression of phagocytosis.ConclusionsGLCM analysis on SIM dataset quantitatively described different phases of macrophage phagocytic behavior revealing the dynamics of lysosomal movements in the ischemic brain indicating initial active internalization vs. final digestion/autophagy.

Highlights

  • Phagocytosis is a key function of myeloid cells and is highly involved in brain ischemic injury

  • We provide a full validation of the method by assessing (1) the quality of the superresolved acquisition dataset by software-based image diagnose, (2) the occurrence of image artifacts by comparing Structured illumination microscopy (SIM) images with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images, and (3) the functional meaning of SIM image analysis by time-lapse imaging of phagocytosis in live microglia cultures

  • CD68-positive cell distribution in the ischemic brain and scheme of the phagocytic process After Permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (pMCAo), CD68-positive myeloid cells were recruited to the ischemic core area (Fig. 1(a, b))

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Summary

Introduction

Phagocytosis is a key function of myeloid cells and is highly involved in brain ischemic injury. It has been scarcely studied in vivo, preventing a deep knowledge of the processes occurring in the ischemic environment. Phagocytosis is a finely tuned process triggered by opsonization proteins (eat-me signals) like complement active fragments C3b/iC3b recognized by the CD11b/CD18 receptor [6] or immunoglobulins recognized by Fcγ receptors [7], that cover the target and favor myeloid cell chemotaxis [8]. Myeloid cells undergo subcellular changes during phagocytosis, including plasma membrane tension increase, cytoskeletal reorganization, and vesicular trafficking [9, 10]. The second phase of phagocytosis is completed by lysozime-induced digestion and lysosome recycling involving Golgi and endoplasmatic reticulum compartments (Fig. 1)

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