Microglia are highly adaptable innate immune cells that rapidly respond to damage signals in the brain through adoption of a reactive phenotype and production of defensive inflammatory cytokines. Microglia express a distinct transcriptome, encoding receptors that allow them to dynamically respond to pathogens, damage signals, and cellular debris. Expression of one such receptor, the microglia-specific purinergic receptor , is known to be downregulated in reactive microglia. Here, we explore the microglial response to purinergic damage signals in reactive microglia in the TMEV mouse model of viral brain infection and temporal lobe epilepsy. Using two-photon calcium imaging in acute hippocampal brain slices, we found that the ability of microglia to detect damage signals, engage calcium signaling pathways, and chemoattract towards laser-induced tissue damage was dramatically reduced during the peak period of seizures, cytokine production, and infection. Using combined RNAscope hybridization and immunohistochemistry, we found that during this same stage of heightened infection and seizures, microglial expression was reduced, while the pro-inflammatory cytokine expression was upregulated in microglia, suggesting that the depressed ability of microglia to respond to new damage signals via occurs during the time when local elevated cytokine production contributes to seizure generation following infection. Therefore, changes in microglial purinergic receptors during infection likely limit the ability of reactive microglia to respond to new threats in the CNS and locally contain the scale of the innate immune response in the brain.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10979929PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.03.06.583768DOI Listing

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