[PDF][PDF] Genetic cell ablation reveals clusters of local self-renewing microglia in the mammalian central nervous system

J Bruttger, K Karram, S Wörtge, T Regen, F Marini… - Immunity, 2015 - cell.com
J Bruttger, K Karram, S Wörtge, T Regen, F Marini, N Hoppmann, M Klein, T Blank, S Yona
Immunity, 2015cell.com
During early embryogenesis, microglia arise from yolk sac progenitors that populate the
developing central nervous system (CNS), but how the tissue-resident macrophages are
maintained throughout the organism's lifespan still remains unclear. Here, we describe a
system that allows specific, conditional ablation of microglia in adult mice. We found that the
microglial compartment was reconstituted within 1 week of depletion. Microglia repopulation
relied on CNS-resident cells, independent from bone-marrow-derived precursors. During …
Summary
During early embryogenesis, microglia arise from yolk sac progenitors that populate the developing central nervous system (CNS), but how the tissue-resident macrophages are maintained throughout the organism's lifespan still remains unclear. Here, we describe a system that allows specific, conditional ablation of microglia in adult mice. We found that the microglial compartment was reconstituted within 1 week of depletion. Microglia repopulation relied on CNS-resident cells, independent from bone-marrow-derived precursors. During repopulation, microglia formed clusters of highly proliferative cells that migrated apart once steady state was achieved. Proliferating microglia expressed high amounts of the interleukin-1 receptor (IL-1R), and treatment with an IL-1R antagonist during the repopulation phase impaired microglia proliferation. Hence, microglia have the potential for efficient self-renewal without the contribution of peripheral myeloid cells, and IL-1R signaling participates in this restorative proliferation process.
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