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The embryonic zebrafish brain is seeded by a lymphatic-dependent population of mrc1 + microglia precursors.

Lauren A GreenMichael R O'DeaCamden A HooverDana F DeSantisCody J Smith
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2022)
Microglia are the resident macrophages of the CNS that serve critical roles in brain construction. Although human brains contain microglia by 4 weeks gestation, an understanding of the earliest microglia that seed the brain during its development remains unresolved. Using time-lapse imaging in zebrafish, we discovered a mrc1a + microglia precursor population that seeds the brain before traditionally described microglia. These early microglia precursors are dependent on lymphatic vasculature that surrounds the brain and are independent of pu1 + yolk sac-derived microglia. Single-cell RNA-sequencing datasets reveal Mrc1 + microglia in the embryonic brains of mice and humans. We then show in zebrafish that these early mrc1a + microglia precursors preferentially expand during pathophysiological states in development. Taken together, our results identify a critical role of lymphatics in the microglia precursors that seed the early embryonic brain.
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