| Literature DB >> 26604973 |
SeungHwan Lee1, YaSi Wu1, Xiang Qun Shi1, Ji Zhang2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Both aging and obesity have been recognized widely as health conditions that profoundly affect individuals, families and the society. Aged and obese people often report altered pain responses while underlying mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. We aim to understand whether spinal microglia could potentially contribute to altered sensory behavior in aged and obese population.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Inflammation; Microglia; Obesity; Pain; Spinal cord
Year: 2015 PMID: 26604973 PMCID: PMC4657254 DOI: 10.1186/s12979-015-0049-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immun Ageing ISSN: 1742-4933 Impact factor: 6.400
Fig. 1Impaired motor and sensory functions in adult obese, aged and aged obese mice. a) Body weight changes were observed in DIO mice, significantly increased in both DIO 6 and 17 month-mice compared to age-matched lean mice. (n = 6–8/group, ***p < 0.001, lean 6 vs. DIO 6, +++p < 0.001, lean 17 vs. DIO 17, ###p < 0.001, DIO 6 vs. DIO 17, xxx p < 0.001, lean 3 vs. lean 6, 17). b) Blood glucose levels were not significantly altered after long term high-fat diet (n = 6–8/group). c) Impaired motor coordination was observed in both DIO 6 and 17 month-mice, while lean 17 month-mice stayed less time on Rotarod. (n = 6–8/group, ***p < 0.001, lean 6 vs. DIO 6, +++p < 0.001, lean 17 vs. DIO 17,) d) Mechanical allodynia was reversed with aging (xxx p < 0.001, lean 3 vs. lean17) and with obesity in 6 month-mice (n = 6–8/group, *p < 0.05, lean 6 vs. DIO 6). e) Thermal hypersensitivity was observed in DIO 6 month-mice compared to lean 6 month-mice (n = 6–8/group, **p < 0.01, lean 6 vs. DIO 6) as well as in aged mice (n = 6–8/group, xx p < 0.01, xxx p < 0.001, lean 3 months vs. lean 6, 17 months). f) Cold hypersensitivity was detected in DIO 6 month-mice (n = 6–8/group, **p < 0.01, lean 6 vs. DIO 6), however, it was significantly reversed in DIO 17 month-mice (n = 6–8/group, +++p < 0.001, lean 17 vs. DIO 17, ###p < 0.001, DIO 6 vs. DIO 17)
Fig. 2Alterations on spinal microglia with aging and obesity. a) Microglia in the dorsal horn of lumbar spinal cord was labeled with Iba1 (red). While there was no obvious difference among the groups of 3 mo, 6 mo and DIO 6 mo mice, the density of Iba1+ microglia was higher in lean and DIO 17 month-mice. b) Total number of Iba1+ cells was significantly increased in lean 17 month-mice compared to lean 3 month-mice (xxx p < 0.001, lean 3 vs. lean 17) which was further increased in DIO 17 month-mice (n = 6–10 section/animal, n = 3 animals/group, +++p < 0.001, lean 17 vs. DIO 17, ###p < 0.001, DIO 6 vs. DIO 17). c) Iba1+ microglia (red) underwent morphological changes with aging and obesity. It was observed that cell bodies were enlarged (arrowheads) and processes were retracted (arrows) while more lipofuscin granules (yellow) were accumulated in these enlarged cell bodies with aging and obesity. d) Microglia clusters were found in the spinal cord white matter of aged mice (square in lean 17 month-mice), not found in lean 3 and 6 month-mice. Confocal scanning images showed that clusters were composed of 5-7 microglia and contained less lipofuscin granules
Fig. 3Functional analysis of spinal microglia with aging and obesity. a) Expression of FcγR III/II (CD16/32) on CD11b+ microglia in the spinal cords. CD16/32 (red) expression was found in dorsal horns of lumbar spinal cords in aged animals (lean and DIO 17 month-mice), which was colocalized with CD11b+ microglia (green). Only few CD16/32+/CD11b + microglia was observed in lean 3, 6, and DIO 6 month-mice. b) CD68 expression was closely associated with lipofuscin accumulation in aged microglia. Arrows indicate CD68 staining (blue, left) and lipofuscin pigments (green, right). The increased lipofuscin deposit with aging (lean 17 and DIO 17 month-mice) was closely associated with CD68. CD68 signals in obese and aged mice anatomically matched with intracellular aggregation of lipofuscin
Fig. 4Inflammatory mediators in lumbar spinal cord. The mRNA levels of pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF-α was highly increased in lean 17 month-mice (n = 3/group, xx p < 0.01, lean 3 vs. lean 17). IL-6 mRNA expression was increased in DIO 6 mice (n = 3/group, *p < 0.05, lean 6 vs. DIO 6). IL-1β was not affected by aging nor by obesity (n = 3/group, p > 0.05). The expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines including IL-10 and TGF-β were not significantly altered
Detailed information on the selection of primers for real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
| Gene | NCBI ID # | Forward | Reverse | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primer | Sequence | Primer | Sequence | ||
| IL1β | NM_008361.3 | mIL1β-F1 | CTATACCTGTCCTGTCTA | mIL1β-R1 | GCTCTTGACTTCTATCTTG |
| IL6 | NM_031168.1 | mIL6-F1 | CTGAAACTTCCAGAGATA | mIL6-R1 | TTCATGTACTCCAGGTAG |
| TNFα | NM_013693.2 | mTNFα-F1 | TTCTGTCTACTGAACTTC | mTNFα-R1 | CCATAGAACTGATGAGAG |
| IL10 | NM_010548.2 | mIL10-F1 | CTATGCTGCCTGCTCTTA | mIL10-R1 | GCTGGTCCTTTGTTTGAAA |
| TGFβ | NM_009367.3 | mTGFβ-F1 | AGAGAAGAACTGCTGTGT | mTGFβ-R1 | GGTTGTGTTGGTTGTAGAG |
| GAPDH | NM_008084.2 | mGAPDH-F1 | GTGAAGGTCGGTGTGAAC | mGAPDH-R1 | AATCTCCACTTTGCCACTG |
NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information
IL interleukin
TNF tumor necrosis factor
TGF transforming growth factor
GAPDH glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase