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Pharmacological depletion of microglia leads to a dose-dependent reduction in inflammation and senescence in the aged murine brain
Neuroscience. 2022 Feb 22;S0306-4522(22)00079-3. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2022.02.018.
Milan R Stojiljkovic 1, Christian Schmeer 2, Otto W Witte 3
Abstract:
...Depletion of microglia using genetical or pharmacological approaches leads to opposite results regarding effects on brain cognition. In this study we pharmacologically depleted microglia using orally delivered low and high doses of the CSF1R inhibitor PLX5622 and assessed the expression levels of known inflammation markers (TNF-α, IL1-β, IL-6, IL-10), glia markers (Iba-1 and Gfap) and specific senescence marker p16Ink4a in the aged murine brain. Our results indicate that treatment with low and high doses of PLX5622 leads to a dose-dependent depletion of microglial cells with similar levels in young and aged mice. We also show that treatment with low and high PLX5622 differentially affected cytokine levels in young and old brains. By using low doses we could achieve reduction in inflammation circumventing the astrocyte activation. Removal of microglia cells led to decreased expression of the senescence marker p16Ink4a in the aged brain, indicating a relevant contribution of these cells to the expression of this marker and their senescent status in the healthy aging brain. Our results indicate that increased and detrimental brain inflammation in aged murine brain can be impaired by selectively reducing the microglial cell population.
PMID: 35217122
Tags: mice, microglia, p16, PLX5622, senolytics