4.7 Review

Microglia as hackers of the matrix: sculpting synapses and the extracellular space

Journal

CELLULAR & MOLECULAR IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 11, Pages 2472-2488

Publisher

CHIN SOCIETY IMMUNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1038/s41423-021-00751-3

Keywords

Neuroscience; Perineuronal nets; Microglia; Extracellular matrix; Neuroinflammation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01NS083801, RF1AG056768, RF1AG065329, U54 AG054349, F31NS108611, F31NS111882]

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Microglia play a crucial role in shaping the synaptic environment in the brain, including modulating the perisynaptic matrix and perineuronal nets (PNNs). Alterations in the extracellular matrix (ECM) surrounding synapses may have implications for synapse dynamics, highlighting the interconnected relationship between microglia, synapses, and the ECM. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms by which microglial regulation of the ECM impacts normal brain homeostasis and diseases.
Microglia shape the synaptic environment in health and disease, but synapses do not exist in a vacuum. Instead, pre- and postsynaptic terminals are surrounded by extracellular matrix (ECM), which together with glia comprise the four elements of the contemporary tetrapartite synapse model. While research in this area is still just beginning, accumulating evidence points toward a novel role for microglia in regulating the ECM during normal brain homeostasis, and such processes may, in turn, become dysfunctional in disease. As it relates to synapses, microglia are reported to modify the perisynaptic matrix, which is the diffuse matrix that surrounds dendritic and axonal terminals, as well as perineuronal nets (PNNs), specialized reticular formations of compact ECM that enwrap neuronal subsets and stabilize proximal synapses. The interconnected relationship between synapses and the ECM in which they are embedded suggests that alterations in one structure necessarily affect the dynamics of the other, and microglia may need to sculpt the matrix to modify the synapses within. Here, we provide an overview of the microglial regulation of synapses, perisynaptic matrix, and PNNs, propose candidate mechanisms by which these structures may be modified, and present the implications of such modifications in normal brain homeostasis and in disease.

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