Microglia in neurodegenerative disease

VH Perry, JAR Nicoll, C Holmes - Nature Reviews Neurology, 2010 - nature.com
VH Perry, JAR Nicoll, C Holmes
Nature Reviews Neurology, 2010nature.com
Microglia, the resident macrophages of the CNS, are exquisitely sensitive to brain injury and
disease, altering their morphology and phenotype to adopt a so-called activated state in
response to pathophysiological brain insults. Morphologically activated microglia, like other
tissue macrophages, exist as many different phenotypes, depending on the nature of the
tissue injury. Microglial responsiveness to injury suggests that these cells have the potential
to act as diagnostic markers of disease onset or progression, and could contribute to the …
Abstract
Microglia, the resident macrophages of the CNS, are exquisitely sensitive to brain injury and disease, altering their morphology and phenotype to adopt a so-called activated state in response to pathophysiological brain insults. Morphologically activated microglia, like other tissue macrophages, exist as many different phenotypes, depending on the nature of the tissue injury. Microglial responsiveness to injury suggests that these cells have the potential to act as diagnostic markers of disease onset or progression, and could contribute to the outcome of neurodegenerative diseases. The persistence of activated microglia long after acute injury and in chronic disease suggests that these cells have an innate immune memory of tissue injury and degeneration. Microglial phenotype is also modified by systemic infection or inflammation. Evidence from some preclinical models shows that systemic manipulations can ameliorate disease progression, although data from other models indicates that systemic inflammation exacerbates disease progression. Systemic inflammation is associated with a decline in function in patients with chronic neurodegenerative disease, both acutely and in the long term. The fact that diseases with a chronic systemic inflammatory component are risk factors for Alzheimer disease implies that crosstalk occurs between systemic inflammation and microglia in the CNS.
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