Requirement for Microglia for the Maintenance of Synaptic Function and Integrity in the Mature Retina.
Xu WangLian ZhaoJun ZhangRobert N FarissWenxin MaFriedrich KretschmerMinhua WangHao Hua QianTudor C BadeaJeffrey S DiamondWen-Biao GanJerome E RogerWai T WongPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Microglia, the principal resident immune cell population in the CNS, has been implicated in diseases in the brain and retina. However, how they contribute to the everyday function of the CNS is unclear. Using the model of the adult mouse retina, we examined the constitutive role of microglia by depleting microglia from the retina. We found that in the absence of microglia, retinal neurons did not undergo overt cell death or become structurally disorganized in their processes. However, connections between neurons called synapses begin to break down, leading to a decreased ability of the retina to transmit light responses. Our results indicate that retinal microglia contribute constitutively to the maintenance of synapses underlying healthy vision.