Rationale: Hypertension is a major risk factor for cerebral small vessel disease, the most prevalent cause of vascular cognitive impairment. As we have shown, hypertension induced by a prolonged Angiotensin II infusion is associated with increased permeability of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), chronic activation of microglia and myelin loss. In this study we therefore aim to determine the contribution of microglia to hypertension-induced cognitive impairment in an experimental hypertension model by a pharmacological depletion approach. Methods: For this study, adult Cx3Cr1gfp/wtxThy1yfp/0 reporter mice were infused for 12 weeks with Angiotensin II or saline and subgroups were treated with PLX5622, a highly selective CSF1R tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) was measured via tail-cuff. Short- and long-term spatial memory was assessed during an Object Location task and a Morris Water Maze task (MWM). Microglia depletion efficacy was assessed by flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. BBB leakages, microglia phenotype and myelin integrity were assessed by immunohistochemistry. Results: SBP, heart weight and carotid pulsatility were increased by Ang II and were not affected by PLX5622. Short-term memory was significantly impaired in Ang II hypertensive mice, and partly prevented in Ang II mice treated with PLX5622. Histological and flow cytometry analysis revealed almost complete ablation of microglia and a 60% depletion of brain resident perivascular macrophages upon CSF1R inhibition. Number and size of BBB leakages were increased in Ang II hypertensive mice, but not altered by PLX5622 treatment. Microglia acquired a pro-inflammatory phenotype at the site of BBB leakages in both Saline and Ang II mice and were successfully depleted by PLX5622. There was however no significant change in myelin integrity at the site of leakages. Conclusion: Our results show that depletion of microglia and PVMs, by CSF1R inhibition prevents short-term memory impairment in Ang II induced hypertensive mice. We suggest this beneficial effect is mediated by the major decrease of pro-inflammatory microglia within BBB leakages. This novel finding supports the critical role of brain immune cells in the pathogenesis of hypertension-related cognitive impairment. An adequate modulation of microglia /PVM density and phenotype may constitute a relevant approach to prevent and/or limit the progression of vascular cognitive impairment.
Cells often adopt different phenotypes, dictated by tissue-specific or local signals such as cell-cell and cell-matrix contacts or molecular micro-environment. This holds in extremis for macrophages with their high phenotypic plasticity. Their broad range of functions, some even opposing, reflects their heterogeneity, and a multitude of subsets has been described in different tissues and diseases. Such micro-environmental imprint cannot be adequately studied by single-cell applications as cells are detached from their context, while histology-based assessment lacks the phenotypic depth due to limitations in marker combination. Here, we present a novel, integrative approach in which 15-color multispectral imaging allows comprehensive cell classification based on multi-marker expression patterns, followed by downstream analysis pipelines to link their phenotypes to contextual, micro-environmental cues such as their cellular (“community”) and metabolic (“local lipidome”) niches in complex tissue. The power of this approach is illustrated for myeloid subsets and associated lipid signatures in murine atherosclerotic plaque.
Infiltration of immune cells in the subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue (AT) deposits leads to a low-grade inflammation contributing to the development of obesity-associated complications such as type 2 diabetes. To quantitatively and qualitatively investigate the immune cell subsets in human AT deposits, we have developed a flow cytometry approach. The stromal vascular fraction (SVF), containing the immune cells, is isolated from subcutaneous and visceral AT biopsies by collagenase digestion. Adipocytes are removed after centrifugation. The SVF cells are stained for multiple membrane-bound markers selected to differentiate between immune cell subsets and analyzed using flow cytometry. As a result of this approach, pro- and anti-inflammatory macrophage subsets, dendritic cells (DCs), B-cells, CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells, and NK cells can be detected and quantified. This method gives detailed information about immune cells in AT and the amount of each specific subset. Since there are numerous fluorescent antibodies available, our flow cytometry approach can be adjusted to measure various other cellular and intracellular markers of interest.
Cells often adopt different phenotypes, dictated by tissue-specific or local signals such as cell-cell and cell-matrix contacts or molecular micro-environment. This holds in extremis for macrophages with their high phenotypic plasticity. Their broad range of functions, some even opposing, reflects their heterogeneity, and a multitude of subsets has been described in different tissues and diseases. Such micro-environmental imprint cannot be adequately studied by single-cell applications, as cells are detached from their context, while histology-based assessment lacks the phenotypic depth due to limitations in marker combination. Here, we present a novel, integrative approach in which 15-color multispectral imaging allows comprehensive cell classification based on multi-marker expression patterns, followed by downstream analysis pipelines to link their phenotypes to contextual, micro-environmental cues, such as their cellular ("community") and metabolic ("local lipidome") niches in complex tissue. The power of this approach is illustrated for myeloid subsets and associated lipid signatures in murine atherosclerotic plaque.