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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 27, 2003, 23(21):7759-7766
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Increased Morphological Diversity of Microglia in the Activated Hypothalamic Supraoptic Nucleus
Albert E. Ayoub and
A. K. Salm
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, West Virginia University School
of Medicine, Morgantown, West Virginia 26506-9128
Microglia are the immune cells of the CNS. In the normal adult mammalian
brain, the majority of these cells is quiescent and exhibits a ramified
morphology. Microglia are perhaps best known for their swift transformation to
an activated ameboid morphology in response to pathological insults. Here we
have observed the responsiveness of these cells to events surrounding the
normal activation of neurosecretory neurons in the hypothalamic supraoptic
nucleus (SON), a well studied model of structural plasticity in the CNS.
Neurons in the SON were activated by substituting 2% saline for drinking
water. Brain sections were collected from four experimental groups [controls
(C), 2 d-dehydrated (2D), 7 d-dehydrated (D7), and 7 d-dehydrated/21
d-rehydrated animals (R21)] and stained with Isolectin-B4-HRP to visualize
microglial cells. Based on morphological criteria, we quantified ramified,
hypertrophied, and ameboid microglia using unbiased stereological techniques.
Statistical analyses showed significant increases in the number of
hypertrophied microglia in the D2 and D7 groups. Moreover, there was a
significant increase in the number of ameboid microglia in the D7 group. No
changes were seen across conditions in the number of ramified cells, nor did
we observe any significant phenotypic changes in a control area of the
cingulate gyrus. Hence, increased morphological diversity of microglia was
found specifically in the SON and was reversible with the cessation of
stimulation. These results indicate that phenotypic plasticity of microglia
may be a feature of the normal structural remodeling that accompanies neuronal
activation in addition to the activation that accompanies brain pathology.
Key words: plasticity; microglia; SON; hypothalamus; magnocellular neurons; stereology
Received Jan 21, 2003;
revised July 8, 2003;
accepted July 8, 2003.
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