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1.
Commun Biol ; 7(1): 896, 2024 Jul 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39043941

ABSTRACT

The central nervous system (CNS) includes anatomically distinct macrophage populations including parenchyma microglia and CNS-associated macrophages (CAMs) localized at the interfaces like meninges and perivascular space, which play specialized roles for the maintenance of the CNS homeostasis with the help of precisely controlled gene expressions. However, the transcriptional machinery that determines their cell-type specific states of microglia and CAMs remains poorly understood. Here we show, by myeloid cell-specific deletion of transcription factors, IRF8 and MAFB, that both adult microglia and CAMs utilize IRF8 to maintain their core gene signatures, although the genes altered by IRF8 deletion are different in the two macrophage populations. By contrast, MAFB deficiency robustly affected the gene expression profile of adult microglia, whereas CAMs are almost independent of MAFB. Our data suggest that distinct transcriptional machineries regulate different macrophages in the CNS.


Subject(s)
Central Nervous System , Interferon Regulatory Factors , Macrophages , MafB Transcription Factor , MafB Transcription Factor/genetics , MafB Transcription Factor/metabolism , Animals , Macrophages/metabolism , Interferon Regulatory Factors/metabolism , Interferon Regulatory Factors/genetics , Mice , Central Nervous System/metabolism , Microglia/metabolism , Mice, Knockout , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Transcription, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation
2.
Cell Rep ; 42(2): 112092, 2023 02 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36753421

ABSTRACT

The relationships between tissue-resident microglia and early macrophages, especially their lineage segregation outside the yolk sac, have been recently explored, providing a model in which a conversion from macrophages seeds microglia during brain development. However, spatiotemporal evidence to support such microglial seeding in situ and to explain how it occurs has not been obtained. By cell tracking via slice culture, intravital imaging, and Flash tag-mediated or genetic labeling, we find that intraventricular CD206+ macrophages, which are abundantly observed along the inner surface of the mouse cerebral wall, frequently enter the pallium at embryonic day 12. Immunofluorescence of the tracked cells show that postinfiltrative macrophages in the pallium acquire microglial properties while losing the CD206+ macrophage phenotype. We also find that intraventricular macrophages are supplied transepithelially from the roof plate. This study demonstrates that the "roof plate→ventricle→pallium" route is an essential path for microglial colonization into the embryonic mouse brain.


Subject(s)
Brain , Microglia , Animals , Mice , Microglia/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , Macrophages/metabolism , Phenotype
4.
Nature ; 604(7907): 740-748, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35444273

ABSTRACT

All tissue-resident macrophages of the central nervous system (CNS)-including parenchymal microglia, as well as CNS-associated macrophages (CAMs1) such as meningeal and perivascular macrophages2-7-are part of the CNS endogenous innate immune system that acts as the first line of defence during infections or trauma2,8-10. It has been suggested that microglia and all subsets of CAMs are derived from prenatal cellular sources in the yolk sac that were defined as early erythromyeloid progenitors11-15. However, the precise ontogenetic relationships, the underlying transcriptional programs and the molecular signals that drive the development of distinct CAM subsets in situ are poorly understood. Here we show, using fate-mapping systems, single-cell profiling and cell-specific mutants, that only meningeal macrophages and microglia share a common prenatal progenitor. By contrast, perivascular macrophages originate from perinatal meningeal macrophages only after birth in an integrin-dependent manner. The establishment of perivascular macrophages critically requires the presence of arterial vascular smooth muscle cells. Together, our data reveal a precisely timed process in distinct anatomical niches for the establishment of macrophage subsets in the CNS.


Subject(s)
Cell Lineage , Central Nervous System , Macrophages , Central Nervous System/immunology , Female , Humans , Immunity, Innate , Macrophages/cytology , Microglia , Pregnancy , Yolk Sac
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