Phenotypic transition of microglia into astrocyte-like cells associated with disease onset in a model of inherited ALS

Autor: Emiliano eTrias, Pablo eDíaz-Amarilla, Silvia eOlivera-Bravo, Eugenia eIsasi, Derek A Drechsel, Nathan eLopez, Charles Samuel Bradford, Kyle Edward Ireton, Joseph S Beckman, Luis Hector Barbeito
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2013
Předmět:
Zdroj: Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, Vol 7 (2013)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 1662-5102
DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2013.00274
Popis: Microglia and reactive astrocytes accumulate in the spinal cord of rats expressing the ALS-linked SOD1G93A mutation. We previously reported that the rapid progression of paralysis in ALS rats is associated with the appearance of proliferative astrocyte-like cells thatsurroundmotor neurons. These cells, designated as Aberrant Astrocytes (AbA cells) because of their atypical astrocytic phenotype, exhibit high toxicity to motor neurons. However, the cellular origin of AbA cells remains unknown. Because AbA cells are labeled with the proliferation marker Ki67, we analyzed the phenotypic makers of proliferating glial cells that surround motor neurons by immunohistochemistry. The number of Ki67+AbA cells sharply increased in symptomatic rats, displaying large cell bodies with processes embracing motor neurons. Most were co-labeled with astrocytic marker GFAP concurrently with the microglial markers Iba1 and CD163. Cultures of spinal cord prepared from symptomatic SOD1G93A rats yielded large numbers of microglia expressing Iba1, CD11b and CD68. Cells sortedfor CD11b expression by flow cytometry transformed into AbA cells within two weeks. During these two weeks, the expression of microglial markers largely disappeared, while GFAP and S100β expression increased. The phenotypic transition to AbA cells was stimulated by forskolin. These findings provide evidence for a subpopulation of proliferating microglial cells in SOD1G93A rats that undergo a phenotypic transition into AbA cells after onset of paralysis that may promote the fulminant disease progression. These cells could be a therapeutic target for slowing paralysis progression in ALS.
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