4.7 Article

Similar Microglial Cell Densities across Brain Structures and Mammalian Species: Implications for Brain Tissue Function

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 40, Issue 24, Pages 4622-4643

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2339-19.2020

Keywords

cell density; cell numbers; comparative; evolution; microglia

Categories

Funding

  1. Carlos Chagas Filho Foundation for Research Support of the State of Rio de Janeiro-FAPERJ (SDS fellowship)
  2. Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
  3. James S. McDonnell Foundation [220020232, 220020293]
  4. Vanderbilt University laboratory startup funds

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Microglial cells play essential volume-related actions in the brain that contribute to the maturation and plasticity of neural circuits that ultimately shape behavior. Microglia can thus be expected to have similar cell sizes and even distribution both across brain structures and across species with different brain sizes. To test this hypothesis, we determined microglial cell densities (the inverse of cell size) using immunocytochemistry to Ibal in samples of free cell nuclei prepared with the isotropic fractionator from brain structures of 33 mammalian species belonging to males and females of five different clades. We found that microglial cells constitute similar to 7% of non-neuronal cells in different brain structures as well as in the whole brain of all mammalian species examined. Further, they vary little in cell density compared with neuronal cell densities within the cerebral cortex, across brain structures, across species within the same Glade, and across mammalian clades. As a consequence, we find that one microglial cell services as few as one and as many as 100 neurons in different brain regions and species, depending on the local neuronal density. We thus conclude that the addition of microglial cells to mammalian brains is governed by mechanisms that constrain the size of these cells and have remained conserved over 200 million years of mammalian evolution. We discuss the probable consequences of such constrained size for brain function in health and disease.

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