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Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations

Microglia are immune cells within the central nervous system. In brain-developing tumors, gliomas are able to silence the defense and immune functions of microglia, a phenomenon which strongly contributes to tumor progression and treatment resistance. Being activated and highly motile, microglia inf...

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Autores principales: Voisin, Pierre, Bouchaud, Véronique, Merle, Michel, Diolez, Philippe, Duffy, Laura, Flint, Kristian, Franconi, Jean-Michel, Bouzier-Sore, Anne-Karine
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2965014/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21031160
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnene.2010.00131
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author Voisin, Pierre
Bouchaud, Véronique
Merle, Michel
Diolez, Philippe
Duffy, Laura
Flint, Kristian
Franconi, Jean-Michel
Bouzier-Sore, Anne-Karine
author_facet Voisin, Pierre
Bouchaud, Véronique
Merle, Michel
Diolez, Philippe
Duffy, Laura
Flint, Kristian
Franconi, Jean-Michel
Bouzier-Sore, Anne-Karine
author_sort Voisin, Pierre
collection PubMed
description Microglia are immune cells within the central nervous system. In brain-developing tumors, gliomas are able to silence the defense and immune functions of microglia, a phenomenon which strongly contributes to tumor progression and treatment resistance. Being activated and highly motile, microglia infiltrate tumors and secrete macrophagic chemoattractant factors. Thereafter, the tumor cells shut down their immune properties and stimulate the microglia to release tumor growth-promoting factors. The result of such modulation is that a kind of symbiosis occurs between microglia and tumor cells, in favor of tumor growth. However, little is known about microglial phenotype and metabolic modifications in a tumoral environment. Co-cultures were performed using CHME5 microglia cells grown on collagen beads or on coverslips and placed on monolayer of C6 cells, limiting cell/cell contacts. Phagocytic behavior and expression of macrophagic and cytoskeleton markers were monitored. Respiratory properties and energetic metabolism were also studied with regard to the activated phenotype of microglia. In co-cultures, transitory modifications of microglial morphology and metabolism were observed linked to a concomitant transitory increase of phagocytic properties. Therefore, after 1 h of co-culture, microglia were activated but when longer in contact with tumor cells, phagocytic properties appear silenced. Like the behavior of the phenotype, microglial respiration showed a transitory readjustment although the mitochondria maintained their perinuclear relocation. Nevertheless, the energetic metabolism of the microglia was altered, suggesting a new energetic steady state. The results clearly indicate that like the depressed immune properties, the macrophagic and metabolic status of the microglia is quickly driven by the glioma environment, despite short initial phagocytic activation. Such findings question the possible contribution of diffusible tumor factors to the microglial metabolism.
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spelling pubmed-29650142010-10-28 Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations Voisin, Pierre Bouchaud, Véronique Merle, Michel Diolez, Philippe Duffy, Laura Flint, Kristian Franconi, Jean-Michel Bouzier-Sore, Anne-Karine Front Neuroenergetics Neuroscience Microglia are immune cells within the central nervous system. In brain-developing tumors, gliomas are able to silence the defense and immune functions of microglia, a phenomenon which strongly contributes to tumor progression and treatment resistance. Being activated and highly motile, microglia infiltrate tumors and secrete macrophagic chemoattractant factors. Thereafter, the tumor cells shut down their immune properties and stimulate the microglia to release tumor growth-promoting factors. The result of such modulation is that a kind of symbiosis occurs between microglia and tumor cells, in favor of tumor growth. However, little is known about microglial phenotype and metabolic modifications in a tumoral environment. Co-cultures were performed using CHME5 microglia cells grown on collagen beads or on coverslips and placed on monolayer of C6 cells, limiting cell/cell contacts. Phagocytic behavior and expression of macrophagic and cytoskeleton markers were monitored. Respiratory properties and energetic metabolism were also studied with regard to the activated phenotype of microglia. In co-cultures, transitory modifications of microglial morphology and metabolism were observed linked to a concomitant transitory increase of phagocytic properties. Therefore, after 1 h of co-culture, microglia were activated but when longer in contact with tumor cells, phagocytic properties appear silenced. Like the behavior of the phenotype, microglial respiration showed a transitory readjustment although the mitochondria maintained their perinuclear relocation. Nevertheless, the energetic metabolism of the microglia was altered, suggesting a new energetic steady state. The results clearly indicate that like the depressed immune properties, the macrophagic and metabolic status of the microglia is quickly driven by the glioma environment, despite short initial phagocytic activation. Such findings question the possible contribution of diffusible tumor factors to the microglial metabolism. Frontiers Research Foundation 2010-10-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2965014/ /pubmed/21031160 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnene.2010.00131 Text en Copyright © 2010 Voisin, Bouchaud, Merle, Diolez, Duffy, Flint, Franconi and Bouzier-Sore. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Voisin, Pierre
Bouchaud, Véronique
Merle, Michel
Diolez, Philippe
Duffy, Laura
Flint, Kristian
Franconi, Jean-Michel
Bouzier-Sore, Anne-Karine
Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations
title Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations
title_full Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations
title_fullStr Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations
title_full_unstemmed Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations
title_short Microglia in Close Vicinity of Glioma Cells: Correlation Between Phenotype and Metabolic Alterations
title_sort microglia in close vicinity of glioma cells: correlation between phenotype and metabolic alterations
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2965014/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21031160
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnene.2010.00131
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