Human fetal microglia acquire homeostatic immune-sensing properties early in development

Laura Kracht(University Medical Center Groningen), Malte Borggrewe(University Medical Center Groningen), Sharon Eskandar(University Medical Center Groningen), Nieske Brouwer(University Medical Center Groningen), Susana M. Chuva de Sousa Lopes(Leiden University Medical Center), Jon D. Laman(University Medical Center Groningen), Sicco A. Scherjon(University Medical Center Groningen), Jelmer R. Prins(University Medical Center Groningen), Susanne M. Kooistra(University Medical Center Groningen), Bart J. L. Eggen(University Medical Center Groningen)
Science
July 30, 2020
Cited by 221Open Access
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Abstract

Microglia, immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS), are important for tissue development and maintenance and are implicated in CNS disease, but we lack understanding of human fetal microglia development. Single-cell gene expression and bulk chromatin profiles of microglia at 9 to 18 gestational weeks (GWs) of human fetal development were generated. Microglia were heterogeneous at all studied GWs. Microglia start to mature during this developmental period and increasingly resemble adult microglia with CNS-surveilling properties. Chromatin accessibility increases during development with associated transcriptional networks reflective of adult microglia. Thus, during early fetal development, microglia progress toward a more mature, immune-sensing competent phenotype, and this might render the developing human CNS vulnerable to environmental perturbations during early pregnancy.


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