Melatonin Activates Anti-Inflammatory Features in Microglia in a Multicellular Context: Evidence from Organotypic Brain Slices and HMC3 Cells

Author:

Merlo Sara1ORCID,Caruso Grazia Ilaria123,Korde Dhwani Sunil2ORCID,Khodorovska Alla4ORCID,Humpel Christian2ORCID,Sortino Maria Angela1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical and Biotechnological Sciences, Section of Pharmacology, University of Catania, 95123 Catania, Italy

2. Laboratory of Psychiatry and Experimental Alzheimer’s Research, Medical University of Innsbruck, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria

3. PhD Program in Biotechnologies, University of Catania, 95123 Catania, Italy

4. Department of Histology, Cytology and Embryology, Bukovinian State Medical University, Teatralnaya Square, 2, 58002 Chernivtsi, Ukraine

Abstract

Melatonin (MEL) is a neurohormone endowed with neuroprotective activity, exerted both directly on neuronal cells and indirectly through modulation of responsive glial cells. In particular, MEL’s effects on microglia are receptor-mediated and in part dependent on SIRT1 activation. In the present study, we exploited the highly preserved cytoarchitecture of organotypic brain cultures (OC) to explore the effects of MEL on hippocampal microglia in a 3D context as compared to a single cell type context represented by the human HMC3 cell line. We first evaluated the expression of MEL receptor MT1 and SIRT1 and then investigated MEL action against an inflammatory stimulation with LPS: OCs were cultured for a total of 2 weeks and during this time exposed to 0.1 μg/mL of LPS for 24 h either on day 1 (LPS 1°) or on day 11 (LPS 11°). MEL was added immediately after plating and kept for the entire experiment. Under these conditions, both MEL and LPS induced amoeboid microglia. However, the same round phenotype matched different polarization features. LPS increased the number of nuclear-NF-kB+ round cells and MEL alone or in combination with LPS increased BDNF+ round microglia. In addition, MEL contrasted LPS effects on NF-kB expression. Data from HMC3 microglia confirmed MEL’s anti-inflammatory effects against LPS in terms of CASP1 induction and BDNF release, identifying SIRT1 as a mediator. However, no effects were evident for MEL alone on HMC3 microglia. Overall, our results point to the importance of the multicellular context for full MEL activity, especially in a preventive view, and support the use of OCs as a favorable model to explore inflammatory responses.

Funder

Italian Ministry of University

University of Catania

ARCES (Italy) and by the Italian Society of Pharmacology

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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