| Literature DB >> 35250459 |
Emma F Garland1, Iain J Hartnell1, Delphine Boche1.
Abstract
Microglia and astrocytes play essential roles in the central nervous system contributing to many functions including homeostasis, immune response, blood-brain barrier maintenance and synaptic support. Evidence has emerged from experimental models of glial communication that microglia and astrocytes influence and coordinate each other and their effects on the brain environment. However, due to the difference in glial cells between humans and rodents, it is essential to confirm the relevance of these findings in human brains. Here, we aim to review the current knowledge on microglia-astrocyte crosstalk in humans, exploring novel methodological techniques used in health and disease conditions. This will include an in-depth look at cell culture and iPSCs, post-mortem studies, imaging and fluid biomarkers, genetics and transcriptomic data. In this review, we will discuss the advantages and limitations of these methods, highlighting the understanding these methods have brought the field on these cells communicative abilities, and the knowledge gaps that remain.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; astrocytes; biomarkers; genetics; human; microglia; neuroinflmamation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35250459 PMCID: PMC8888691 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2022.824888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Functional and morphological characteristics of microglia and astrocytes. AD, Alzheimer’s disease; PD, Parkinson’s disease; HD, Huntington’s disease; MND, motor neuron disease; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; MS, multiple sclerosis. Microglia phenotypes have been disputed and may not reflect their functions.
Current methods available to study human glial cells.
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
| Genetics | Identifies candidate genes and pathways relevant to disease. | Requires confirmation of the cellular/biological implications. |
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| Transcriptomics | Identify specific cell-type pathways. | Very large amount of data obtained. |
| Lack of consistency based on the source of the cells and technique used. | ||
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| Primary culture | Can study human cells independently of their environment. | Cells may behave differently to |
| Allows easy control of the cell environment. | Challenging to obtain from humans. | |
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| iPSCs | Minimally invasive. | Derived cells may be different from astrocytes/microglia |
| Sources directly from patients. | Non -cerebral origin. | |
| Retains some of the human specificities after re-differentiation. | Challenging to maintain overtime. | |
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| Study of glial cells | Provides a static, late-stage picture rather than dynamic image of the events. |
| Identification of several cell populations. | Post-mortem delay | |
| Tissue preservation for some methods. | ||
| High heterogeneity of the human population | ||
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| PET | Real time functional readout for a specific cell type. | Low cell specificity. |
| Moderately invasive method. | TSPO polymorphism affects binding. | |
| Many ligands being developed. | Requires injection of radioactive tracer. Expensive. | |
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| MRI | Real time readout. | Absence of cell specificity. |
| Non-invasive. | ||
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| Biomarkers | Temporal investigation. | May not reflect brain inflammation. |
| Indicator of inflammatory status. | Can be invasive for patients (lumbar puncture). | |
| Potential for predictive readout. | Link with glial cells unclear. | |
| Can follow therapeutic effects | ||
FIGURE 2GFAP+ stained astrocyte subtypes. (A) Protoplasmic astrocytes of the gray matter. Note the lighter staining, showing less expression of GFAP. (B) Darker stained fibrous astrocytes of the white matter. (C) Intralaminar astrocytes stretching process from layer I–II to layers III and IV. (D) Varicose projection astrocyte. Black arrows point to varicosities on the straight primary process. White arrow points to faintly stained cell body. [Scale bar (A,B) = 50 μm, (C) = 100 μm, (D) = 25 μm].
FIGURE 3Expression of GFAP+ astrocytes. Astrocytes in control cases (A) and Pick’s disease cases (B), with the latter showing darker staining and greater cell number. Scale bars = 50 μm.
Most common microglia and astrocyte immunomarkers and their functions.
| Microglia | Astrocyte |
FIGURE 4Expression of Iba1+ microglia. Microglia in controls (A) and Alzheimer’s disease (B). Cells in (B) appear to have thicker processes. Scale bars = 50 μm.
FIGURE 5Known communication pathway between microglia and astrocytes in the human brain in response to disease. Receptors (underlined) and the signaling molecules (italic) are shown with the color of the arrow denoting the cell source (green = astrocytes, blue = microglia). The resulting phenotypic changes or movements are shown by gray arrows (single or triple, respectively). As microglia become activated by PAMP/DAMP signaling via TLR receptors (both blue), they become activated (gray arrow). Activated microglia release IL1β and TNFα which bind through IL1R and TNFR receptors to activate astrocytes and other microglial cells. This signaling with the addition of C1q signaling on astrocytes leads to a neurotoxic phenotype, with a loss of neuroprotective functions. Activated astrocytes release IL1β and TNFα to propagate a neuroinflammatory response. They also release ATP which binds to P2XR receptors on microglia, leading to extracellular vesicle release. Activated astrocytes and microglia may also release chemokines (CCL2–CCL5) which bind to receptors on microglia (CCR1–CCR5) and stimulate their chemotaxis toward the site of injury/pathogen. Inflammation is in part resolved by CD200 binding to CD200R on activated microglia, leading them to return to a homeostatic phenotype.