| Literature DB >> 28912686 |
Agnes Nadjar1,2,3, Henna-Kaisa M Wigren4, Marie-Eve Tremblay5,6.
Abstract
Sleep serves crucial learning and memory functions in both nervous and immune systems. Microglia are brain immune cells that actively maintain health through their crucial physiological roles exerted across the lifespan, including phagocytosis of cellular debris and orchestration of neuroinflammation. The past decade has witnessed an explosive growth of microglial research. Considering the recent developments in the field of microglia and sleep, we examine their possible impact on various pathological conditions associated with a gain, disruption, or loss of sleep in this focused mini-review. While there are extensive studies of microglial implication in a variety of neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases, less is known regarding their roles in sleep disorders. It is timely to stimulate new research in this emergent and rapidly growing field of investigation.Entities:
Keywords: animal; disease models; diseases; microglia; sleep; wakefulness
Year: 2017 PMID: 28912686 PMCID: PMC5582207 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2017.00250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Microglial functions and relevance to sleep disorders.
| Microglia are the main producers of cytokines in the central nervous system during inflammatory diseases. | IL-1 and TNFα are well-known to promote sleep in humans and in animal models (Krueger, | Pro-inflammatory cytokines may exert somnogenic effects by promoting microglial attraction to synapses (Karrer et al., |
| PET scans of chronic d-METH self-administrating individuals reveals increased binding of the radiotracer [11C](R)-PK11195 that labels “activated” microglia (McCoy et al., | ||
| In mice undergoing microglial depletion, the duration of daily wakefulness produced by d-METH is reduced by nearly 1 h. | The effects of d-METH on sleep and wakefulness could be mediated partly by microglia, through exacerbated oxidative stress and pro-inflammatory cytokine release (Wang et al., | |
| Increased levels of IL-6 and TNFα are measured in the sera or plasma from narcoleptic patients (Cartier et al., | Decrease in CCR expression could lead to a defect in the recognition and phagocytosis of damaged cells by microglia and consequently to a delayed resolution of acute inflammation. These defects could lead to enhanced autoimmunity resulting in the loss of hypocretin neurons. | |
| Reduced levels of microglia/macrophage-derived CCR1 and CCR3 are measured in peripheral blood samples from narcolepsy patients (Mignot et al., | ||
| Microglia can present antigens to T cells upon their binding to MHC class II expressed on their surface. | An increased microglial expression of MHC class II is measured in the central nervous system of narcoleptic dogs (Tafti, | Local infusion of a low-dose of the endotoxin lipopolysaccharide in rats, as a model of chronic inflammation, induces the loss of hypocretin neurons and increases the number of MHC class II-positive microglia in the lateral hypothalamus. Microglia-mediated inflammation might be a trigger for the loss of hypocretin neurons during narcolepsy (Maurovich-Horvat et al., |
| Microglia prune synapses in a complement-dependent manner in contexts of health and disease. | A distinctive complotype, i.e., a combination of polymorphisms defining complement activity: BfS, C4A3, and C4B1, was identified in narcopleptic patients (Savill et al., | Exacerbation of complement-dependent microglial phagocytic activity is a plausible mechanism leading to the loss of hypocretin neurons. |
| Microglial co-localization with the marker of glutamatergic axon terminals VGLUT1 is increased after 5 days of chronic sleep deprivation in mouse prefrontal cortex (Bellesi et al., | These observations suggest an exacerbated microglial pruning of synapes, which could be mediated by the classical complement pathway considering that expression of the complement protein C3 was concomitantly increased by sleep deprivation (Bellesi et al., | |
| Microglia detect changes in homeostasis through their recognition of exogenous or endogenous danger signals, such as danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). | Elevated levels of DAMPs are measured in blood samples from obstructive sleep apnea patients (Sapin et al., | Microglia could respond to DAMPs induced by enhanced neuronal activity or psychological stress. The consequences on neuronal health and cognitive function are still undetermined however. |