| Literature DB >> 31061494 |
Jo A Van Ginderachter1,2, Yvan Saeys3,4, Hannah Van Hove1,2, Liesbet Martens3,5, Isabelle Scheyltjens1,2, Karen De Vlaminck1,2, Ana Rita Pombo Antunes1,2, Sofie De Prijck5,6, Niels Vandamme3,5,7, Sebastiaan De Schepper8, Gert Van Isterdael5,9, Charlotte L Scott5,6,10, Jeroen Aerts11, Geert Berx7,12, Guy E Boeckxstaens8, Roosmarijn E Vandenbroucke5,13,14, Lars Vereecke14,15,16, Diederik Moechars11, Martin Guilliams5,6, Kiavash Movahedi17,18.
Abstract
While the roles of parenchymal microglia in brain homeostasis and disease are fairly clear, other brain-resident myeloid cells remain less well understood. By dissecting border regions and combining single-cell RNA-sequencing with high-dimensional cytometry, bulk RNA-sequencing, fate-mapping and microscopy, we reveal the diversity of non-parenchymal brain macrophages. Border-associated macrophages (BAMs) residing in the dura mater, subdural meninges and choroid plexus consisted of distinct subsets with tissue-specific transcriptional signatures, and their cellular composition changed during postnatal development. BAMs exhibited a mixed ontogeny, and subsets displayed distinct self-renewal capacity following depletion and repopulation. Single-cell and fate-mapping analysis both suggested that there is a unique microglial subset residing on the apical surface of the choroid plexus epithelium. Finally, gene network analysis and conditional deletion revealed IRF8 as a master regulator that drives the maturation and diversity of brain macrophages. Our results provide a framework for understanding host-macrophage interactions in both the healthy and diseased brain.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31061494 DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0393-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Neurosci ISSN: 1097-6256 Impact factor: 28.771