Project description:Transcriptome analysis of spinal cord microglia and total spinal cord from Lewis rats intratracheally treated with PBS, neomycin or vancomycin.
Project description:To elucidate differential gene expression pattern in atopic diathesis model mice spinal cord microglia compared to normal mice. Sort microglia from atopic diathesis model mice and control mice, extract RNA and subjected to RNA array assay.
Project description:We investigated the gene expression profile of monocyte-derived macrophages and microglia following spinal cord injury. Moreover, we investigated the gene expression profole of M-CSF induced macrophages and new-born derived microglia following TGFb1 treatment. monocyte-derived macrophages and microglia following spinal cord injury M-CSF induced macrophages and new-born derived microglia following TGFb1 treatment
Project description:Transcriptome analysis of lung-derived MBP-specific T cells, spinal cord microglia and total spinal cord following antibiotic treatment of the lung
Project description:RNA-seq analysis of microglia following spinal cord injury demonstrated that microglia response is driven by time after injury but not lesion severity.
Project description:Inflammation after injury of the central nervous system (CNS) is increasingly viewed as a therapeutic target. However, comparative studies in different CNS compartments are sparse. To date only few studies based on immunohistochemical data and all referring to mechanical injury have directly compared inflammation in different CNS compartments. These studies revealed that inflammation is more pronounced in spinal cord than in brain. Therefore, it is unclear whether concepts and treatments established in the cerebral cortex can be transferred to spinal cord lesions and vice versa or whether immunological treatments must be adapted to different CNS compartments. By use of transcriptomic and flow cytometry analysis of equally sized photothrombotically induced lesions in the cerebral cortex and the spinal cord, we could document an overall comparable inflammatory reaction and repair activity in brain and spinal cord between day 1 and day 7 after ischemia. However, remyelination was increased after cerebral versus spinal cord ischemia which is in line with increased remyelination in grey matter in previous analyses and was accompanied by microglia dominated inflammation opposed to monocytes/macrophages dominated inflammation after spinal cord ischemia. Interestingly remyelination could be reduced by microglia and not hematogenous macrophage depletion. Our results show that despite different cellular composition of the postischemic infiltrate the inflammatory response in cerebral cortex and spinal cord are comparable between day 1 and day 7. A striking difference was higher remyelination capacity in the cerebral cortex, which seems to be supported by microglia dominance.
Project description:Microglia contribute to the initiation of pain, however, a translationally viable approach addressing how or when to modulate these cells remains elusive. We used a targeted, inducible, genetic microglial depletion strategy at both acute and acute-to-chronic transition phases in the clinically-relevant tibial fracture/casting pain model to determine the contribution of microglia to the initiation and maintenance of pain. We observed complete resolution of pain which coincided with the timeframe of full repopulation of microglia after transient microglial depletion at the acute-to-chronic phase. These repopulated microglia were morphologically distinct from control microglia, signifying they may exhibit a unique transcriptome. RNA sequencing of repopulated spinal cord microglia identified genes of interest using weighted gene coexpression network analysis (WGCNA). We intersected these genes with a newly generated single nuclei microglial dataset from human spinal cord dorsal horn and identified human-relevant genes that may ultimately promote pain resolution after injury. This work presents a novel approach to gene discovery in pain and provides comprehensive datasets for the development of future microglial-targeted therapeutics.
Project description:Microglia contribute to the initiation of pain, however, a translationally viable approach addressing how or when to modulate these cells remains elusive. We used a targeted, inducible, genetic microglial depletion strategy at both acute and acute-to-chronic transition phases in the clinically-relevant tibial fracture/casting pain model to determine the contribution of microglia to the initiation and maintenance of pain. We observed complete resolution of pain which coincided with the timeframe of full repopulation of microglia after transient microglial depletion at the acute-to-chronic phase. These repopulated microglia were morphologically distinct from control microglia, signifying they may exhibit a unique transcriptome. RNA sequencing of repopulated spinal cord microglia identified genes of interest using weighted gene coexpression network analysis (WGCNA). We intersected these genes with a newly generated single nuclei microglial dataset from human spinal cord dorsal horn and identified human-relevant genes that may ultimately promote pain resolution after injury. This work presents a novel approach to gene discovery in pain and provides comprehensive datasets for the development of future microglial-targeted therapeutics.