AI Article Synopsis

  • The human central nervous system (CNS) has a diverse immune compartment that includes various cell populations, notably microglia (brain macrophages) and CNS-associated macrophages (CAMs), which are less common and not well studied.
  • Researchers used advanced techniques like single-cell RNA sequencing and spatial transcriptomics to analyze over 356,000 transcriptomes from 102 individuals, revealing insights into the presence and variability of CAM subclasses in different conditions.
  • The study also examined myeloid cell types in glioblastoma samples, finding that the immune responses to hypoxia differ significantly between cancer-affected areas and healthy brain regions, emphasizing the complexity of the brain's immune system.

Article Abstract

The innate immune compartment of the human central nervous system (CNS) is highly diverse and includes several immune-cell populations such as macrophages that are frequent in the brain parenchyma (microglia) and less numerous at the brain interfaces as CNS-associated macrophages (CAMs). Due to their scantiness and particular location, little is known about the presence of temporally and spatially restricted CAM subclasses during development, health and perturbation. Here we combined single-cell RNA sequencing, time-of-flight mass cytometry and single-cell spatial transcriptomics with fate mapping and advanced immunohistochemistry to comprehensively characterize the immune system at human CNS interfaces with over 356,000 analyzed transcriptomes from 102 individuals. We also provide a comprehensive analysis of resident and engrafted myeloid cells in the brains of 15 individuals with peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, revealing compartment-specific engraftment rates across different CNS interfaces. Integrated multiomic and high-resolution spatial transcriptome analysis of anatomically dissected glioblastoma samples shows regionally distinct myeloid cell-type distributions driven by hypoxia. Notably, the glioblastoma-associated hypoxia response was distinct from the physiological hypoxia response in fetal microglia and CAMs. Our results highlight myeloid diversity at the interfaces of the human CNS with the periphery and provide insights into the complexities of the human brain's immune system.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10803260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41591-023-02673-1DOI Listing

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