Elsevier

Brain, Behavior, and Immunity

Volume 32, August 2013, Pages 70-85
Brain, Behavior, and Immunity

Characterization of phenotype markers and neuronotoxic potential of polarised primary microglia in vitro

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2013.02.005Get rights and content
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open access

Abstract

Microglia mediate multiple facets of neuroinflammation, including cytotoxicity, repair, regeneration, and immunosuppression due to their ability to acquire diverse activation states, or phenotypes. Modulation of microglial phenotype is an appealing neurotherapeutic strategy but a comprehensive study of classical and more novel microglial phenotypic markers in vitro is lacking. The aim of this study was to outline the temporal expression of a battery of phenotype markers from polarised microglia to generate an in vitro tool for screening the immunomodulatory potential of novel compounds. We characterised expression of thirty-one macrophage/microglial phenotype markers in primary microglia over time (4, 12, 36, and 72 h), using RT-qPCR or multiplex protein assay. Firstly, we selected Interleukin-4 (IL-4) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as the strongest M1–M2 polarising stimuli, from six stimuli tested. At each time point, markers useful to identify that microglia were M1 included iNOS, Cox-2 and IL-6 and a loss of M2a markers. Markers useful for quantifying M2b-immunomodulatory microglia included, increased IL-1RA and SOCS3 and for M2a-repair and regeneration, included increased arginase-1, and a loss of the M1 and M2b markers were discriminatory. Additional markers were regulated at fewer time points, but are still likely important to monitor when assessing the immunomodulatory potential of novel therapies. Further, to facilitate identification of how novel immunomodulatory treatments alter the functional affects of microglia, we characterised how the soluble products from polarised microglia affected the type and rate of neuronal death; M1/2b induced increasing and M2a-induced decreasing neuronal loss. We also assessed any effects of prior activation state, to provide a way to identify how a novel compound may alter phenotype depending on the stage of injury/insult progression. We identified generally that a prior M1/2b reduced the ability of microglia to switch to M2a. Altogether, we have characterised a profile of phenotype markers and a mechanism of assessing functional outcome that we can use as a reference guide for first-line screening of novel immunomodulatory therapies in vitro in the search for viable neuroprotectants.

Highlight

► A unique catalogue of phenotype markers and neuronotoxic effects of polarised primary microglia, as a comparative tool to screen neurotherapies.

Keywords

Interleukins
Inflammation
Lipopolysaccharide
M1–M2
Macrophage
Neuroinflammation
Neuroprotection
Neuronal cell death
TLR4
Drug-screening

Cited by (0)

1

Joint second authorship.

2

Joint last authorship.

3

Current address: Department of Cell Biology and Histology, School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of the Basque Country, Vizcaya, Spain.