Differential accumulation of storage bodies with aging defines discrete subsets of microglia in the healthy brain.

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Abstract

To date, microglia subsets in the healthy CNS have not been identified. Utilizing autofluorescence (AF) as a discriminating parameter, we identified two novel microglia subsets in both mice and non-human primates, termed autofluorescence-positive (AF+) and negative (AF-). While their proportion remained constant throughout most adult life, the AF signal linearly and specifically increased in AF+ microglia with age and correlated with a commensurate increase in size and complexity of lysosomal storage bodies, as detected by transmission electron microscopy and LAMP1 levels. Post-depletion repopulation kinetics revealed AF- cells as likely precursors of AF+ microglia. At the molecular level, the proteome of AF+ microglia showed overrepresentation of endolysosomal, autophagic, catabolic, and mTOR-related proteins. Mimicking the effect of advanced aging, genetic disruption of lysosomal function accelerated the accumulation of storage bodies in AF+ cells and led to impaired microglia physiology and cell death, suggestive of a mechanistic convergence between aging and lysosomal storage disorders.

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Burns, J. C., Cotleur, B., Walther, D. M., Bajrami, B., Rubino, S. J., Wei, R., … Mingueneau, M. (2020). Differential accumulation of storage bodies with aging defines discrete subsets of microglia in the healthy brain. ELife, 9, 1–71. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.57495

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