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Publication : Dynamic intravital imaging reveals reactive vessel-associated microglia play a protective role in cerebral malaria coagulopathy.

First Author  Solomon OD Year  2023
Journal  Sci Rep Volume  13
Issue  1 Pages  19526
PubMed ID  37945689 Mgi Jnum  J:342434
Mgi Id  MGI:7548001 Doi  10.1038/s41598-023-43208-5
Citation  Solomon OD, et al. (2023) Dynamic intravital imaging reveals reactive vessel-associated microglia play a protective role in cerebral malaria coagulopathy. Sci Rep 13(1):19526
abstractText  Vascular congestion and coagulopathy have been shown to play a role in human and experimental cerebral malaria (eCM), but little is known about the role of microglia, or microglia-vascular interactions and hypercoagulation during disease progression in this fatal infection. Recent studies show microglia bind to fibrinogen, a glycoprotein involved in thrombosis. An eCM model of Plasmodium chabaudi infection in mice deficient in the regulatory cytokine IL-10 manifests neuropathology, including hypercoagulation with extensive fibrin(ogen) deposition and neuroinflammation. Intravital microscopy and immunofluorescence are applied to elucidate the role of microglia in eCM. Results show microgliosis and coagulopathy occur early in disease at 3 dpi (day post-infection), and both are exacerbated as disease progresses to 7dpi. Vessel associated microglia increase significantly at 7 dpi, and the expression of the microglial chemoattractant CCL5 (RANTES) is increased versus uninfected and localized with fibrin(ogen) in vessels. PLX3397 microglia depletion resulted in rapid behavioral decline, severe hypothermia, and greater increase in vascular coagulopathy. This study suggests that microglia play a prominent role in controlling infection-initiated coagulopathy and supports a model in which microglia play a protective role in cerebral malaria by migrating to and patrolling the cerebral vasculature, potentially regulating degree of coagulation during systemic inflammation.
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