Functional role of brain-engrafted macrophages against brain injuries.

  • Feng, Xi
  • Frias, Elma S
  • Paladini, Maria S
  • Chen, David
  • Boosalis, Zoe
  • Becker, McKenna
  • Gupta, Sonali
  • Liu, Sharon
  • Gupta, Nalin
  • Rosi, Susanna
Publication date
October 2021
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California

Abstract

BackgroundBrain-resident microglia have a distinct origin compared to macrophages in other organs. Under physiological conditions, microglia are maintained by self-renewal from the local pool, independent of hematopoietic progenitors. Pharmacological depletion of microglia during whole-brain radiotherapy prevents synaptic loss and long-term recognition memory deficits. However, the origin or repopulated cells and the mechanisms behind these protective effects are unknown.MethodsCD45low/int/CD11b+ cells from naïve brains, irradiated brains, PLX5622-treated brains and PLX5622 + whole-brain radiotherapy-treated brains were FACS sorted and sequenced for transcriptomic comparisons. Bone marrow chimeras were used to trace the origin and long-term...

Extracted data

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