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Microglia are an essential component of the neuroprotective scar that forms after spinal cord injury.

Victor Bellver-LandeteFloriane BretheauBenoit MailhotNicolas VallièresMartine LessardMarie-Eve JanelleNathalie VernouxMarie-Eve TremblayTobias FuehrmannMolly S ShoichetSteve Lacroix
Published in: Nature communications (2019)
The role of microglia in spinal cord injury (SCI) remains poorly understood and is often confused with the response of macrophages. Here, we use specific transgenic mouse lines and depleting agents to understand the response of microglia after SCI. We find that microglia are highly dynamic and proliferate extensively during the first two weeks, accumulating around the lesion. There, activated microglia position themselves at the interface between infiltrating leukocytes and astrocytes, which proliferate and form a scar in response to microglia-derived factors, such as IGF-1. Depletion of microglia after SCI causes disruption of glial scar formation, enhances parenchymal immune infiltrates, reduces neuronal and oligodendrocyte survival, and impairs locomotor recovery. Conversely, increased microglial proliferation, induced by local M-CSF delivery, reduces lesion size and enhances functional recovery. Altogether, our results identify microglia as a key cellular component of the scar that develops after SCI to protect neural tissue.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord injury
  • neuropathic pain
  • inflammatory response
  • spinal cord
  • lipopolysaccharide induced
  • signaling pathway
  • wound healing
  • cell proliferation
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • blood brain barrier
  • gestational age