Ultrastructure of microglia-synapse interactions in the HIV-1 Tat-injected murine central nervous system

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Abstract

The destruction of normal synaptic architecture is the main pathogenetic substrate in HI V-associated neurocognitive disorder (HAND), but the sequence of cellular events underlying this outcome is not completely understood. Our recent work in a mouse model of HAND using a single intraparenchymal injection of the HI V-1 regulatory protein trans-activator of transcription revealed increased microglial phagocytosis that was accompanied by an increased release of proinflammatory cytokines and elimination of dendritic spines in vivo, thus suggesting that microglia-synapse interactions could be dysregulated in HAND. Here, we further examine the relationships between microglia and synaptic structures in our mouse model, at high spatial resolution using immunocytochemical electron microscopy. Our ultrastructural analysis reveals the prevalence of putative microglial filopodial protrusions, which are targeting excitatory and inhibitory synapses, some of which contain phagocytic inclusions at various distances from their distal extremities to the microglial cell bodies. These observations thus suggest that cell-to-cell contacts mediated by microglial filopodia might be a crucial preliminary step in the elimination of synaptic structures in a neuroinflammatory milieu that occurs in HAND. © 2013 Landes Bioscience.

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Tremblay, M. È., Marker, D. F., Puccini, J. M., Muly, E. C., Lu, S. M., & Gelbard, H. A. (2013). Ultrastructure of microglia-synapse interactions in the HIV-1 Tat-injected murine central nervous system. Communicative and Integrative Biology, 6(6). https://doi.org/10.4161/cib.27670

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