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Publication : Early-life inflammation promotes depressive symptoms in adolescence via microglial engulfment of dendritic spines.

First Author  Cao P Year  2021
Journal  Neuron Volume  109
Issue  16 Pages  2573-2589.e9
PubMed ID  34233151 Mgi Jnum  J:325338
Mgi Id  MGI:6752445 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2021.06.012
Citation  Cao P, et al. (2021) Early-life inflammation promotes depressive symptoms in adolescence via microglial engulfment of dendritic spines. Neuron 109(16):2573-2589.e9
abstractText  Early-life inflammation increases the risk for depression in later life. Here, we demonstrate how early-life inflammation causes adolescent depressive-like symptoms: by altering the long-term neuronal spine engulfment capacity of microglia. For mice exposed to lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammation via the Toll-like receptor 4/NF-kappaB signaling pathway at postnatal day (P) 14, ongoing longitudinal imaging of the living brain revealed that later stress (delivered during adolescence on P45) increases the extent of microglial engulfment around anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) glutamatergic neuronal (ACC(Glu)) spines. When the ACC microglia of LPS-treated mice were deleted or chemically inhibited, the mice did not exhibit depressive-like behaviors during adolescence. Moreover, we show that the fractalkine receptor CX3CR1 mediates stress-induced engulfment of ACC(Glu) neuronal spines. Together, our findings establish that early-life inflammation causes dysregulation of microglial engulfment capacity, which encodes long-lasting maladaptation of ACC(Glu) neurons to stress, thus promoting development of depression-like symptoms during adolescence.
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