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Publication : Microglia turnover with aging and in an Alzheimer's model via long-term in vivo single-cell imaging.

First Author  Füger P Year  2017
Journal  Nat Neurosci Volume  20
Issue  10 Pages  1371-1376
PubMed ID  28846081 Mgi Jnum  J:258024
Mgi Id  MGI:6116545 Doi  10.1038/nn.4631
Citation  Fuger P, et al. (2017) Microglia turnover with aging and in an Alzheimer's model via long-term in vivo single-cell imaging. Nat Neurosci 20(10):1371-1376
abstractText  To clarify the role of microglia in brain homeostasis and disease, an understanding of their maintenance, proliferation and turnover is essential. The lifespan of brain microglia, however, remains uncertain, and reflects confounding factors in earlier assessments that were largely indirect. We genetically labeled single resident microglia in living mice and then used multiphoton microscopy to monitor these cells over time. Under homeostatic conditions, we found that neocortical resident microglia were long-lived, with a median lifetime of well over 15 months; thus, approximately half of these cells survive the entire mouse lifespan. While proliferation of resident neocortical microglia under homeostatic conditions was low, microglial proliferation in a mouse model of Alzheimer''s beta-amyloidosis was increased threefold. The persistence of individual microglia throughout the mouse lifespan provides an explanation for how microglial priming early in life can induce lasting functional changes and how microglial senescence may contribute to age-related neurodegenerative diseases.
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