Author:
Nevelchuk Sofia,Brawek Bianca,Schwarz Niklas,Valiente-Gabioud Ariel,Wuttke Thomas V.,Kovalchuk Yury,Koch Henner,Höllig Anke,Steiner Frederik,Figarella Katherine,Griesbeck Oliver,Garaschuk Olga
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Key functions of Ca2+ signaling in rodent microglia include monitoring the brain state as well as the surrounding neuronal activity and sensing the danger or damage in their vicinity. Microglial Ca2+ dyshomeostasis is a disease hallmark in many mouse models of neurological disorders but the Ca2+ signal properties of human microglia remain unknown.
Methods
We developed a novel genetically-encoded ratiometric Ca2+ indicator, targeting microglial cells in the freshly resected human tissue, organotypically cultured tissue slices and analyzed in situ ongoing Ca2+ signaling of decades-old microglia dwelling in their native microenvironment.
Results
The data revealed marked compartmentalization of Ca2+ signals, with signal properties differing across the compartments and resident morphotypes. The basal Ca2+ levels were low in ramified and high in ameboid microglia. The fraction of cells with ongoing Ca2+ signaling, the fraction and the amplitude of process Ca2+ signals and the duration of somatic Ca2+ signals decreased when moving from ramified via hypertrophic to ameboid microglia. In contrast, the size of active compartments, the fraction and amplitude of somatic Ca2+ signals and the duration of process Ca2+ signals increased along this pathway.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Universitätsklinikum Tübingen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC