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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

TMEM119-defined brain macrophage phenotypes in a chronic stress model induced by corticosterone in male mice.

Journal:
Brain research
Year:
2025
Authors:
Nakagawa, Ryuichi et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry · Japan
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Microglia are crucial for brain immunity, and their phenotypic changes have been implicated in neuroinflammation and the development of depression and anxiety symptoms. The accurate characterization of these changes is challenging due to the interaction of microglia with the brain microenvironment and the presence of central nervous system (CNS)-resident macrophages that share common markers with microglia. Using the microglia-specific marker TMEM119 and bone marrow chimeric mice, we investigated the changes in microglial activity in mice exposed to chronic corticosterone, a widely used rodent model of stress-related behaviors. Flow cytometry analysis was used to identify TMEM119, CD45microglia and TMEM119, CD45microglia. Notably, corticosterone exposure led to a significant increase in the number of TMEM119, CD45microglia, whereas the proportions of TMEM119, CD45microglia remained unchanged. The increased forward and side scatter properties of TMEM119, CD45microglia suggest increased intracellular granularity, which may reflect distinct phenotypic features of this previously overlooked cell population. Our finding of an increased population of TMEM119, CD45microglia may reflect a stress-adapted phenotype similar to that of clinical depression.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40553699/