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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Review: Microglia of the aged brain: primed to be activated and resistant to regulation

TLDR
The purpose of this review is to discuss the current understanding of age‐associated microglial priming, consequences of priming and reactivity, and the impairments in regulatory systems that may underlie these age‐related deficits.
Abstract
Innate immunity within the central nervous system (CNS) is primarily provided by resident microglia. Microglia are pivotal in immune surveillance and also facilitate the co-ordinated responses between the immune system and the brain. For example, microglia interpret and propagate inflammatory signals that are initiated in the periphery. This transient microglial activation helps mount the appropriate physiological and behavioural response following peripheral infection. With normal ageing, however, microglia develop a more inflammatory phenotype. For instance, in several models of ageing there are increased pro-inflammatory cytokines in the brain and increased expression of inflammatory receptors on microglia. This increased inflammatory status of microglia with ageing is referred to as primed, reactive or sensitized. A modest increase in the inflammatory profile of the CNS and altered microglial function in ageing has behavioural and cognitive consequences. Nonetheless, there are major differences in microglial biology between young and old age when the immune system is challenged and microglia are activated. In this context, microglial activation is amplified and prolonged in the aged brain compared with adults. The cause of this amplified microglial activation may be related to impairments in several key regulatory systems with age that make it more difficult to resolve microglial activation. The consequences of impaired regulation and microglial hyper-activation following immune challenge are exaggerated neuroinflammation, sickness behaviour, depressive-like behaviour and cognitive deficits. Therefore the purpose of this review is to discuss the current understanding of age-associated microglial priming, consequences of priming and reactivity, and the impairments in regulatory systems that may underlie these age-related deficits.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Microglial and Macrophage polarization—new Prospects for Brain Repair

TL;DR: It is argued that therapeutic approaches targeting cerebral inflammation should shift from broad suppression of microglia and macrophages towards subtle adjustment of the balance between their phenotypes, and breakthroughs in the identification of regulatory molecules that control these phenotypic shifts could ultimately accelerate research towards curing brain disorders.
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Microglia in Physiology and Disease

TL;DR: The diversity of microglia phenotypes and their responses in health, aging, and disease are described and treatment options that modulate microglial phenotypes are discussed.
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Neuroinflammation and microglial activation in Alzheimer disease: where do we go from here?

TL;DR: The interrelationships between Neuroinflammation and amyloid and tau pathologies as well as the effect of neuroinflammation on the disease trajectory in AD are discussed, focusing on microglia as major players in neuro inflammation and how these cells could be modulated as a therapeutic strategy for AD.
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Neuroinflammation: the devil is in the details.

TL;DR: The purpose of this review is to distinguish different variations of neuro inflammation in a context‐specific manner and detail both positive and negative aspects of neuroinflammatory processes.
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Normal aging induces A1-like astrocyte reactivity

TL;DR: The aging-induced up-regulation of reactive astrocytes genes was significantly reduced in mice lacking the microglial-secreted cytokines known to induce A1 reactiveAstrocyte formation, indicating that microglia promote astroCyte activation in aging.
References
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From inflammation to sickness and depression: when the immune system subjugates the brain

TL;DR: In response to a peripheral infection, innate immune cells produce pro-inflammatory cytokines that act on the brain to cause sickness behaviour, which can lead to an exacerbation of sickness and the development of symptoms of depression in vulnerable individuals.
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Astrocyte–endothelial interactions at the blood–brain barrier

TL;DR: Specific interactions between the brain endothelium, astrocytes and neurons that may regulate blood–brain barrier function are explored to lead to the development of new protective and restorative therapies.
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Resting Microglial Cells Are Highly Dynamic Surveillants of Brain Parenchyma in Vivo

TL;DR: Using in vivo two-photon imaging in neocortex, it is found that microglial cells are highly active in their presumed resting state, continually surveying their microenvironment with extremely motile processes and protrusions.
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Fate Mapping Analysis Reveals That Adult Microglia Derive from Primitive Macrophages

TL;DR: Results identify microglia as an ontogenically distinct population in the mononuclear phagocyte system and have implications for the use of embryonically derived microglial progenitors for the treatment of various brain disorders.
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ATP mediates rapid microglial response to local brain injury in vivo

TL;DR: Extracellular ATP regulates microglial branch dynamics in the intact brain, and its release from the damaged tissue and surrounding astrocytes mediates a rapid microglia response towards injury.
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