Single-cell profiling identifies myeloid cell subsets with distinct fates during neuroinflammation

Marta Joana Costa Jordão(University of Freiburg), Roman Sankowski(University of Freiburg), Stefanie M. Brendecke(University of Freiburg), Sagar(Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics), Giuseppe Locatelli(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Yi-Heng Tai(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Tuan Leng Tay(University of Freiburg), Eva Schramm(University of Freiburg), Stephan Armbruster(University of Freiburg), Nora Hagemeyer(University of Freiburg), Olaf Groß(University of Freiburg), Dominic Mai(University of Freiburg), Özgün Çiçek(University of Freiburg), Thorsten Falk(University of Freiburg), Martin Kerschensteiner(Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology), Dominic Grün(Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics), Marco Prinz(University of Freiburg)
Science
January 25, 2019
Cited by 846

Abstract

The innate immune cell compartment is highly diverse in the healthy central nervous system (CNS), including parenchymal and non-parenchymal macrophages. However, this complexity is increased in inflammatory settings by the recruitment of circulating myeloid cells. It is unclear which disease-specific myeloid subsets exist and what their transcriptional profiles and dynamics during CNS pathology are. Combining deep single-cell transcriptome analysis, fate mapping, in vivo imaging, clonal analysis, and transgenic mouse lines, we comprehensively characterized unappreciated myeloid subsets in several CNS compartments during neuroinflammation. During inflammation, CNS macrophage subsets undergo self-renewal, and random proliferation shifts toward clonal expansion. Last, functional studies demonstrated that endogenous CNS tissue macrophages are redundant for antigen presentation. Our results highlight myeloid cell diversity and provide insights into the brain's innate immune system.


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