Social isolation produces a sex‐ and brain region‐specific alteration of microglia state

Author:

Vu Alex P.1,Lam David1,Denney Cayla1,Lee Kelly V.2,Plemel Jason R.23,Jackson Jesse13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

2. Department of Medicine, Division of Neurology, Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

3. Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractSocial isolation is a profound form of psychological stress that impacts the mental health of a large proportion of society. Other experimental models of stress have demonstrated a microglia response that serves either a protective or pathological function. However, the effect of adult social isolation on microglia has not been thoroughly investigated. We measured microglia territory, branching, end points and phagocytic‐lysosomal activity in group housed C57Bl/6 mice and mice that were socially isolated for 2 weeks. Our results show that the dorsomedial hypothalamus and hippocampal CA2 region of adult male mice undergo increased microglia volume, territory and endpoints following social isolation, whereas females exhibit this increase in the hypothalamus only. Males exhibited decreases in the phagocytic‐lysosomal marker CD68 in microglia in these regions, whereas females showed an increase in CD68 in the hypothalamus suggesting sexually dimorphic and brain region‐specific change in microglia state in response to social isolation. The prefrontal cortex, central amygdala, nucleus accumbens shell and visual cortex did not exhibit changes in microglia structure in either male or female mice. These data show that microglia in different brain regions undergo a distinct response to social isolation which may account for changes in cognition and behaviour associated with this prevalent form of psychological stress.

Funder

Canada Foundation for Innovation

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Neuroscience

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