| Literature DB >> 35626698 |
Carla Cuní-López1,2, Romal Stewart1,3, Hazel Quek1, Anthony R White1.
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases are deteriorating conditions of the nervous system that are rapidly increasing in the ageing population. Increasing evidence suggests that neuroinflammation, largely mediated by microglia, the resident immune cells of the brain, contributes to the onset and progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Hence, microglia are considered a major therapeutic target that could potentially yield effective disease-modifying treatments for neurodegenerative diseases. Despite the interest in studying microglia as drug targets, the availability of cost-effective, flexible, and patient-specific microglia cellular models is limited. Importantly, the current model systems do not accurately recapitulate important pathological features or disease processes, leading to the failure of many therapeutic drugs. Here, we review the key roles of microglia in neurodegenerative diseases and provide an update on the current microglial plaforms utilised in neurodegenerative diseases, with a focus on human microglia-like cells derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells as well as human-induced pluripotent stem cells. The described microglial platforms can serve as tools for investigating disease biomarkers and improving the clinical translatability of the drug development process in neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: clinical translation; microglial platforms; neuroinflammation; patient heterogeneity; patient-derived microglia cells
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35626698 PMCID: PMC9140031 DOI: 10.3390/cells11101662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 7.666
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the development of myeloid cells. Hematopoietic stem cells can commit to either a lymphoid or a myeloid fate through the generation of common lymphoid or myeloid progenitor cells. Common myeloid progenitors are located in the bone marrow of adults, and the yolk sac in embryos. When yolk sac-derived myeloid progenitors colonise the CNS, specific microenvironmental cues direct their differentiation into microglia. These embryonically derived microglia are able to proliferate and self-maintain until adulthood. In the bone marrow, common myeloid progenitors differentiate towards megakaryocytic/erythrocytic or granulocytic/monocytic phenotypes. In the blood, megakaryocyte/erythrocyte progenitors give rise to platelets and erythrocytes (red blood cells), while granulocyte/monocyte progenitors give rise to leukocytes, including granulocytes and monocytes. Circulating monocytes can then be recruited to sites of infection or injury in specific tissues and differentiate into macrophages or dendritic cells. During aging and certain inflammatory conditions, monocytes and other bone marrow-derived progenitors infiltrate the CNS and differentiate into microglia-like cells. It is not well understood whether these microglia-like cells persist or are a temporary addition to the existing microglial population. Listed in grey boxes are representative markers expressed by myeloid cell types. Common markers between microglia and macrophages are highlighted in yellow (MERTK, TREM2, CD68 and IBA1).
Characteristics of primary, immortalised and stem cell-derived microglia cell model systems.
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Foetal/Aged adults Neurological disease (healthy donors limited) | ante-mortem: uncontrollable post-mortem: delay of 2–20 h | 10% FBS in DMEM/F12 | Low and absent expression of High expression of microglia-enriched genes ( Downregulation of mature microglia markers ( Amoeboid morphology Inflammatory activation (enhanced secretion of inflammatory cytokines and nitric oxide) Highly proliferative | Patient-specific Best correlate to in vivo microglia when freshly isolated Tedious and time-consuming isolation procedure Limited resource Ethically challenging to obtain Low sample yields (cells, RNA) Low purity cultures (i.e., 5% of astrocytes and oligodendrocytes) Variable activation states depending on isolation method | Transcriptomic and proteomic profiling of microglia for investigating disease-related phenotypes Characterise microglial heterogeneity associated with brain region and sex | [ | |
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Neonatal/Adult animals Wild type and transgenic animals | ante-mortem: controllable post-mortem: no delay | 10% FBS in DMEM/F12 | Controlled genotype Interspecies differences on genes related to immune function and ageing (e.g., Limited yields, impeding high-throughput assays If cultured long-term, potential for proliferation of contaminating cells (e.g., pericytes) | [ | |||
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| HMO6 | Embryonic | 10% FBS in DMEM/F12 | Attenuated or lack of response to inflammatory stimuli (e.g., neither release of IL-1β nor nitric oxide) | Easy to maintain Unlimited availability Homogenous microglia populations Genetically altered Prone to dedifferentiate Less sensitive to inflammatory stimuli than primary microglia Subject to genetic drift and morphology changes |
Biochemical and molecular studies Pharmacological studies High-throughput screening assays | [ | |
| HµGlia | Adult | 10% FBS in DMEM/F12 | Lack expression of microglia-enriched genes | [ | ||||
| CHME-5 | Embryonic | 10% FBS in DMEM/F12 | Uncertain origin (rat origin suggested) | [ | ||||
| HMC3 | Derived from CHME-5 line | 10% FBS in EMEM | Lack expression of microglia-enriched genes | [ | ||||
| C13NJ | 10% FBS in DMEM/F12 | [ | ||||||
| SV40 (IM-HM) | Embryonic | 20% FBS | Low expression of microglia-enriched genes | [ | ||||
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| BV2 | Neonatal | 10% FBS in DMEM | Attenuated response to inflammatory stimuli (e.g., no release of IL-1β) | [ | |||
| N9, N11 | Embryonic | 10% FBS in DMEM | Express a limited number of inflammatory mediators | [ | ||||
| EOC | Neonatal | 10% FBS in DMEM with M-CSF supplement | Some subtypes do not express MHCII | [ | ||||
| IMG | Adult | 10% FBS in DMEM | Amoeboid morphology | [ | ||||
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| HAPI | Neonatal | 10% FBS in DMEM | Attenuated response to inflammatory stimuli | [ | |||
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Healthy adults Neurological disease | Differentiation towards microglial lineage has been achieved in: | Best resemble foetal or early postnatal microglia when differentiated under 2D mono-culture conditions (i.e., low expression of | More authentic microglia phenotype than immortalised cell lines Unlimited availability of patient material The hiPSC-derived model allows for the generation of isogenic controls Possibility to study human microglia in vivo with humanised mouse models In co-culture models: assess maturational effects derived from the contact with other brain cell types Long differentiation times Differentiation method might not faithfully recapitulate the MYB-independent ontogeny of microglia In mono-culture models: lack of physiologically relevant cell–cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions |
Characterisation of patient-specific disease states in microglia Investigation of the interaction between microglia and other brain cell types Stratification of patient drug responses Development of personalised medicine approaches | [ | ||
| RPMI with GM-CSF and IL-34 supplements (Elaborated in | [ | |||||||
hTERT: human telomerase gene; MHCII: major histocompatibility complex class II; hiPSCs: human-induced pluripotent stem cells; FBS: foetal bovine serum; 2D: two dimensional; 3D: three dimensional.
Published methods to generate monocyte-derived microglia-like cells.
| Leone 2006 | Etemad 2012 | Ohgidani 2014, 2017 | Melief 2016 | Ryan 2017 | Sellgren 2017 | Rawat 2017 | Sellgren 2019 | Ormel 2020, | Banerjee 2021 | Smit 2022 | Quek 2022 | |
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Astrocyte conditioned medium: 25% GM-CSF: 1 ng/mL M-CSF: 10 ng/mL |
Astrocyte conditioned medium: 25% M-CSF: 10 ng/mL NGF-β: 10 ng/mL CCL2: 100 ng/mL |
GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
M-CSF: 10 ng/mL GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL NGF-β: 10 ng/mL CCL2: 100 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
M-CSF: 10 ng/mL NGF-β: 10 ng/mL CCL2: 100 ng/mL |
GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
Astrocyte conditioned medium: 25% GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL M-CSF: 10 ng/mL TGF-β: 20 ng/mL IL-34: 10 ng/mL IFN-γ: 12.5 ng/mL |
GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
Astrocyte conditioned medium: 25% GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL M-CSF: 10 ng/mL TGF-β: 1 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL IFN-γ: 12.5 ng/mL |
GM-CSF: 10 ng/mL IL-34: 100 ng/mL |
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| 12 | 14 | 14 | 14 | 15 | 11 | 10 | 11 | 10 | 10–14 | 10 | 14 |
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| T75 flask | 1 × 105 cells/mL | 4 × 105 cells/mL | 4 × 105 cells/mL | 3 × 105 cells/well | 500,000 cells/well | 50,000 cells/well | 1 × 106 cells/well | 1 × 106 cells/well | 1 × 106/mL | 600,000 cells/well | 500,000 cells/ |
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| Geltrex |
| Geltrex | Poly-L-lysine | Geltrex | Poly-L-lysine | Matrigel |
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| Counterflow centrifugal elutriation | Adherence to plastic | Adherence to plastic | Anti-CD14+ microbeads | Anti-CD14+ microbeads | Adherence to plastic | Anti-CD14+ microbeads | Adherence to plastic | Anti-CD14+ microbeads | Adherence to plastic | Anti-CD14+ microbeads | Adherence to plastic |
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| No | No | No | No | RNAseq | Nanostring | No | Global gene expression by microarray | RNAseq | RNAseq | RNAseq | No |
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| Nasu–Hakola disease (2014) |
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| Schizophrenia | HIV infection | Schizophrenia | Schizophrenia |
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| ALS |
N/A indicates information “not specified”.
Studies that have modelled microglia disease phenotypes using patient-derived microglia in vitro models.
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| FTD |
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1 patient with sporadic FTD 1 patient with familial FTD (progranulin gene mutation—PGRN S116X) |
Reduced levels of intracellular and secreted progranulin | [ |
| FTD-like syndrome |
1 patient homozygous for the TREM2 T66M mutation (FTD-like syndrome) 1 patient homozygous for the TREM2 W50C mutation (Nasu–Hakola disease) |
Accumulation of immature TREM2 protein Absence of TREM2 protein on the plasma membrane Similar release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following LPS stimulation Similar phagocytic capacity | [ | |
| Nasu–Hakola |
2 patients homozygous for the TREM2 T66M and W50C mutations |
Reduced survival Similar release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following LPS stimulation Reduced phagocytosis of apoptotic neuronal cells Reduced release of cytokines mediating chemotaxis and chemoattraction Reduced migration towards apoptotic cells | [ | |
| AD |
>1 * patient heterozygous for the TREM2 RH47H mutation |
Reduced mitochondrial respiratory capacity Reduced phagocytosis of Aβ Inability to perform a glycolytic immunometabolic switch | [ | |
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Reduced activation of NLRP3 inflammasome | [ | |||
| Familial Mediterranean fever |
1 patient |
Increased release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following LPS stimulation Upregulated ASC-speck formation | [ | |
| AD |
2 patients with the APP KM670/671NL Swedish mutation (familial AD) 2 patients with the PSEN1 PSEN1ΔE9 mutation (familial AD) 4 patients with APOEƐ4/4 (sporadic AD) |
Familial lines: Reduced release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following LPS stimulation Similar mitochondrial metabolism Increased chemokinesis Sporadic lines: Increased release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following LPS stimulation Reduced mitochondrial metabolism Reduced chemokinesis | [ | |
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1 patient |
Delayed release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following stimulation with latex beads | [ |
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13 patients |
Increased phagocytosis of synaptic material | [ | |
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14 patients |
Increased mRNA and protein expression of TNF-α following ATP stimulation | [ | |
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20 patients |
Increased release of pro-inflammatory cytokines following LPS stimulation | [ | |
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6 pre-manifest gene carriers 6 manifest gene carriers |
No differences compared to microglia-like cells from matched healthy controls | [ | |
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2 patients (neonates exposed to maternal SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy) |
Phagocytosis of synaptic material No direct comparison with microglia-like cells generated from neonates from healthy mothers | [ | |
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30 patients (including patients with slow, intermediate and rapid disease progression) |
Impaired phagocytosis that correlates with disease progression Altered cytokine profiles Altered morphology Increased DNA damage and NLRP3 inflammasome activity | [ |
* The exact number of patient cell lines is not specified. FTD: frontotemporal dementia; NLRP3: NOD-leucine rich repeat and pyrin containing protein 3.