Profiling Microglia From Alzheimer’s Disease Donors and Non-demented Elderly in Acute Human Postmortem Cortical Tissue

Astrid M. Alsema(University Medical Center Groningen), Qiong Jiang(University of Groningen), Laura Kracht(University of Groningen), Emma Gerrits(University of Groningen), Marissa L. Dubbelaar(University Medical Center Groningen), Anneke Miedema(University of Groningen), Nieske Brouwer(University of Groningen), Elly M. Hol(University Medical Center Utrecht), Jinte Middeldorp(Utrecht University), Roland van Dijk(Utrecht University), Maya E. Woodbury(AbbVie (United States)), Astrid Wachter(AbbVie (Germany)), Simon Xi(AbbVie (United States)), Thomas Möller(AbbVie (United States)), Knut Biber(AbbVie (Germany)), Susanne M. Kooistra(University Medical Center Groningen), Erik Boddeke(University of Copenhagen), Bart J. L. Eggen(University Medical Center Groningen)
Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
October 28, 2020
Cited by 80Open Access
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Abstract

Microglia are the tissue-resident macrophages of the central nervous system (CNS). Recent studies based on bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing in mice indicate high relevance of microglia with respect to risk genes and neuro-inflammation in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Here, we investigated microglia transcriptomes at bulk and single-cell levels in non-demented elderly and AD donors using acute human postmortem cortical brain samples. We identified seven human microglial subpopulations with heterogeneity in gene expression. Notably, gene expression profiles and subcluster composition of microglia did not differ between AD donors and non-demented elderly in bulk RNA sequencing nor in single-cell sequencing.


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