Abstract
BackgroundMicroglia, the resident immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS), have two distinct phenotypes in the developing brain: amoeboid form, known to be amoeboid microglial cells (AMC) and ramified form, known to be ramified microglial cells (RMC). The AMC are characterized by being proliferative, phagocytic and migratory whereas the RMC are quiescent and exhibit a slow turnover rate. The AMC transform into RMC with advancing age, and this transformation is indicative of the gradual shift in the microglial functions. Both AMC and RMC respond to CNS inflammation, and they become hypertrophic when activated by trauma, infection or neurodegenerative stimuli. The molecular mechanisms and functional significance of morphological transformation of microglia during normal development and in disease conditions is not clear. It is hypothesized that AMC and RMC are functionally regulated by a specific set of genes encoding various signaling molecules and transcription factors.ResultsTo address this, we carried out cDNA microarray analysis using lectin-labeled AMC and RMC isolated from frozen tissue sections of the corpus callosum of 5-day and 4-week old rat brain respectively, by laser capture microdissection. The global gene expression profiles of both microglial phenotypes were compared and the differentially expressed genes in AMC and RMC were clustered based on their functional annotations. This genome wide comparative analysis identified genes that are specific to AMC and RMC.ConclusionsThe novel and specific molecules identified from the trancriptome explains the quiescent state functioning of microglia in its two distinct morphological states.
Highlights
Microglia, the resident immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS), have two distinct phenotypes in the developing brain: amoeboid form, known to be amoeboid microglial cells (AMC) and ramified form, known to be ramified microglial cells (RMC)
On sorting the genes based on p values (Additional file 3: Sheet S2), we found several genes that are specific to AMC such as, genes involved in transcriptional repression (Mbd1 which binds to methylated sites on DNA) [47,48], vesicular trafficking (Snx6, a component of the retromer complex) [49], and microtubule depolymerization (Stmn1) [50]
Overall, the transcriptome profiling has identified several genes, which help in elucidating morphological transformation and functions of AMC and RMC
Summary
The resident immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS), have two distinct phenotypes in the developing brain: amoeboid form, known to be amoeboid microglial cells (AMC) and ramified form, known to be ramified microglial cells (RMC). The AMC transform into RMC with advancing age, and this transformation is indicative of the gradual shift in the microglial functions Both AMC and RMC respond to CNS inflammation, and they become hypertrophic when activated by trauma, infection or neurodegenerative stimuli. In the CC, AMC preponderate a week before birth in mice and rats [4,5,6] and actively phagocytose the cellular debris and refine axonal connectivity during the first postnatal week [7,8,9] This is followed by the gradual transition into RMC, which survey the brain parenchyma with their fine and nonoverlapping ramifications, thereby monitoring chronic and acute insults [10]. Infection or any other neurodegenerative stimuli, microglia retract their ramifications, transform into amoeboid or spherical shape, produce pro-inflammatory cytokines and display phagocytosis [11].
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