Literature DB >> 30924711

Differential Microglial Morphological Response, TNFα, and Viral Load in Sedentary-like and Active Murine Models After Systemic Non-neurotropic Dengue Virus Infection.

Giovanni Freitas Gomes1, Railana Deise da Fonseca Peixoto1, Brenda Gonçalves Maciel1, Kedma Farias Dos Santos1, Lohrane Rosa Bayma1, Pedro Alves Feitoza Neto1, Taiany Nogueira Fernandes1, Cintya Castro de Abreu1, Samir Mansour Moraes Casseb2, Camila Mendes de Lima1, Marcus Augusto de Oliveira1, Daniel Guerreiro Diniz1, Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos2, Marcia Consentino Kronka Sosthenes1, Cristovam Wanderley Picanço Diniz1.   

Abstract

Peripheral inflammatory stimuli increase proinflammatory cytokines in the bloodstream and central nervous system and activate microglial cells. Here we tested the hypothesis that contrasting environments mimicking sedentary and active lives would be associated with differential microglial morphological responses, inflammatory cytokines concentration, and virus load in the peripheral blood. For this, mice were maintained either in standard (standard environment) or enriched cages (enriched environment) and then subjected to a single (DENV1) serotype infection. Blood samples from infected animals showed higher viral loads and higher tumor necrosis factor-α (TNFα) mRNA concentrations than control subjects. Using an unbiased stereological sampling approach, we selected 544 microglia from lateral septum for microscopic 3D reconstruction. Morphological complexity contributed most to cluster formation. Infected groups exhibited significant increase in the microglia morphological complexity and number, despite the absence of dengue virus antigens in the brain. Two microglial phenotypes (type I with lower and type II with higher morphological complexity) were found in both infected and control groups. However, microglia from infected mice maintained in enriched environment showed only one morphological phenotype. Two-way ANOVA revealed that environmental changes and infection influenced type-I and II microglial morphologies and number. Environmental enrichment and infection interactions may contribute to microglial morphological change to a point that type-I and II morphological phenotypes could no longer be distinguished in infected mice from enriched environment. Significant linear correlation was found between morphological complexity and TNFα peripheral blood. Our findings demonstrated that sedentary-like and active murine models exhibited differential microglial responses and peripheral inflammation to systemic non-neurotropic infections with DENV1 virus.

Entities:  

Keywords:  D1; dengue virus; differential microglia response; enriched environment; lateral septum; peripheral non-neurotropic infection; single serotype serotype infections; standard environment

Year:  2019        PMID: 30924711      PMCID: PMC6542148          DOI: 10.1369/0022155419835218

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Histochem Cytochem        ISSN: 0022-1554            Impact factor:   2.479


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