Functional differences between microglia and monocytes after ischemic stroke

RM Ritzel, AR Patel, JM Grenier, J Crapser… - Journal of …, 2015 - Springer
RM Ritzel, AR Patel, JM Grenier, J Crapser, R Verma, ER Jellison, LD McCullough
Journal of neuroinflammation, 2015Springer
Background The brain's initial innate response to stroke is primarily mediated by microglia,
the resident macrophage of the CNS. However, as early as 4 h after stroke, the blood–brain
barrier is compromised and monocyte infiltration occurs. The lack of discriminating markers
between these two myeloid populations has led many studies to generate conclusions
based on the grouping of these two populations. A growing body of evidence now supports
the distinct roles played by microglia and monocytes in many disease models. Methods …
Background
The brain’s initial innate response to stroke is primarily mediated by microglia, the resident macrophage of the CNS. However, as early as 4 h after stroke, the blood–brain barrier is compromised and monocyte infiltration occurs. The lack of discriminating markers between these two myeloid populations has led many studies to generate conclusions based on the grouping of these two populations. A growing body of evidence now supports the distinct roles played by microglia and monocytes in many disease models.
Methods
Using a flow cytometry approach, combined with ex-vivo functional assays, we were able to distinguish microglia from monocytes using the relative expression of CD45 and assess the function of each cell type following stroke over the course of 7 days.
Results
We found that at 72 h after a 90-min middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO), microglia populations decrease whereas monocytes significantly increase in the stroke brain compared to sham. After stroke, BRDU incorporation into monocytes in the bone marrow increased. After recruitment to the ischemic brain, these monocytes accounted for nearly all BRDU-positive macrophages. Inflammatory activity peaked at 72 h. Microglia produced relatively higher reactive oxygen species and TNF, whereas monocytes were the predominant IL-1β producer. Although microglia showed enhanced phagocytic activity after stroke, monocytes had significantly higher phagocytic capacity at 72 h. Interestingly, we found a positive correlation between TNF expression levels and phagocytic activity of microglia after stroke.
Conclusions
In summary, the resident microglia population is vulnerable to the effects of severe ischemia, show compromised cell cycle progression, and adopt a largely pro-inflammatory phenotype after stroke. Infiltrating monocytes are primarily involved with early debris clearance of dying cells. These findings suggest that the early wave of infiltrating monocytes may be beneficial to stroke repair and future therapies aimed at mitigating microglia cell death may prove more effective than attempting to elicit targeted anti-inflammatory responses from damaged cells.
Springer
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