Microglia are the brain-resident immune cells responsible for surveilling and protecting the central nervous system. These cells can express a wide array of immune genes, and that expression can become highly dynamic in response to changes in the environment, such as traumatic injury or neurological disease. Though microglial immune responses are well studied, we still do not know many mechanisms and regulators underlying all the varied microglial responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThough the brain was long characterized as an immune-privileged organ, findings in recent years have shown extensive communications between the brain and peripheral immune cells. We now know that alterations in the peripheral immune system can affect the behavioral outputs of the central nervous system, but we do not know which brain cells are affected by the presence of peripheral immune cells. Glial cells including microglia, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) are critical for the development and function of the central nervous system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAstrocytes become reactive in response to insults to the central nervous system by adopting context-specific cellular signatures and outputs, but a systematic understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms is lacking. In this study, we developed CRISPR interference screening in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived astrocytes coupled to single-cell transcriptomics to systematically interrogate cytokine-induced inflammatory astrocyte reactivity. We found that autocrine-paracrine IL-6 and interferon signaling downstream of canonical NF-κB activation drove two distinct inflammatory reactive signatures, one promoted by STAT3 and the other inhibited by STAT3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWithin eukaryotic cells, translation is regulated independent of transcription, enabling nuanced, localized, and rapid responses to stimuli. Neurons respond transcriptionally and translationally to synaptic activity. Although transcriptional responses are documented in astrocytes, here we test whether astrocytes have programmed translational responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAstrocytes are critical for the development and function of the central nervous system. In developing brains, immature astrocytes undergo morphological, molecular, cellular, and functional changes as they mature. Although the mechanisms that regulate the maturation of other major cell types in the central nervous system such as neurons and oligodendrocytes have been extensively studied, little is known about the cellular and molecular mechanisms that control astrocyte maturation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEptesicus fuscus is typical of temperate zone bats in that both sexes undergo marked seasonal changes in behavior, endocrine status, and reproductive status. Acoustic communication plays a key role in many seasonal behaviors. For example, males emit specialized vocalizations during mating in the fall, and females use different specialized vocalizations to communicate with infants in late spring.
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