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Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels

Neuronal-glial cell cultures are usually grown attached to or encapsulated in an adhesive environment as evenly distributed networks lacking tissue-like cell density, organization and morphology. In such cultures, microglia have activated amoeboid morphology and do not display extended and intensive...

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Autores principales: Balion, Zbigniev, Svirskienė, Nataša, Svirskis, Gytis, Inokaitis, Hermanas, Cėpla, Vytautas, Ulčinas, Artūras, Jelinskas, Tadas, Eimont, Romuald, Paužienė, Neringa, Valiokas, Ramūnas, Jekabsone, Aistė
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9139096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35625762
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10051023
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author Balion, Zbigniev
Svirskienė, Nataša
Svirskis, Gytis
Inokaitis, Hermanas
Cėpla, Vytautas
Ulčinas, Artūras
Jelinskas, Tadas
Eimont, Romuald
Paužienė, Neringa
Valiokas, Ramūnas
Jekabsone, Aistė
author_facet Balion, Zbigniev
Svirskienė, Nataša
Svirskis, Gytis
Inokaitis, Hermanas
Cėpla, Vytautas
Ulčinas, Artūras
Jelinskas, Tadas
Eimont, Romuald
Paužienė, Neringa
Valiokas, Ramūnas
Jekabsone, Aistė
author_sort Balion, Zbigniev
collection PubMed
description Neuronal-glial cell cultures are usually grown attached to or encapsulated in an adhesive environment as evenly distributed networks lacking tissue-like cell density, organization and morphology. In such cultures, microglia have activated amoeboid morphology and do not display extended and intensively branched processes characteristic of the ramified tissue microglia. We have recently described self-assembling functional cerebellar organoids promoted by hydrogels containing collagen-like peptides (CLPs) conjugated to a polyethylene glycol (PEG) core. Spontaneous neuronal activity was accompanied by changes in the microglial morphology and behavior, suggesting the cells might play an essential role in forming the functional neuronal networks in response to the peptide signalling. The present study examines microglial cell morphology and function in cerebellar cell organoid cultures on CLP-PEG hydrogels and compares them to the cultures on crosslinked collagen hydrogels of similar elastomechanical properties. Material characterization suggested more expressed fibril orientation and denser packaging in crosslinked collagen than CLP-PEG. However, CLP-PEG promoted a significantly higher microglial motility (determined by time-lapse imaging) accompanied by highly diverse morphology including the ramified (brightfield and confocal microscopy), more active Ca(2+) signalling (intracellular Ca(2+) fluorescence recordings), and moderate inflammatory cytokine level (ELISA). On the contrary, on the collagen hydrogels, microglial cells were significantly less active and mostly round-shaped. In addition, the latter hydrogels did not support the neuron synaptic activity. Our findings indicate that the synthetic CLP-PEG hydrogels ensure more tissue-like microglial morphology, motility, and function than the crosslinked collagen substrates.
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spelling pubmed-91390962022-05-28 Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels Balion, Zbigniev Svirskienė, Nataša Svirskis, Gytis Inokaitis, Hermanas Cėpla, Vytautas Ulčinas, Artūras Jelinskas, Tadas Eimont, Romuald Paužienė, Neringa Valiokas, Ramūnas Jekabsone, Aistė Biomedicines Article Neuronal-glial cell cultures are usually grown attached to or encapsulated in an adhesive environment as evenly distributed networks lacking tissue-like cell density, organization and morphology. In such cultures, microglia have activated amoeboid morphology and do not display extended and intensively branched processes characteristic of the ramified tissue microglia. We have recently described self-assembling functional cerebellar organoids promoted by hydrogels containing collagen-like peptides (CLPs) conjugated to a polyethylene glycol (PEG) core. Spontaneous neuronal activity was accompanied by changes in the microglial morphology and behavior, suggesting the cells might play an essential role in forming the functional neuronal networks in response to the peptide signalling. The present study examines microglial cell morphology and function in cerebellar cell organoid cultures on CLP-PEG hydrogels and compares them to the cultures on crosslinked collagen hydrogels of similar elastomechanical properties. Material characterization suggested more expressed fibril orientation and denser packaging in crosslinked collagen than CLP-PEG. However, CLP-PEG promoted a significantly higher microglial motility (determined by time-lapse imaging) accompanied by highly diverse morphology including the ramified (brightfield and confocal microscopy), more active Ca(2+) signalling (intracellular Ca(2+) fluorescence recordings), and moderate inflammatory cytokine level (ELISA). On the contrary, on the collagen hydrogels, microglial cells were significantly less active and mostly round-shaped. In addition, the latter hydrogels did not support the neuron synaptic activity. Our findings indicate that the synthetic CLP-PEG hydrogels ensure more tissue-like microglial morphology, motility, and function than the crosslinked collagen substrates. MDPI 2022-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9139096/ /pubmed/35625762 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10051023 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Balion, Zbigniev
Svirskienė, Nataša
Svirskis, Gytis
Inokaitis, Hermanas
Cėpla, Vytautas
Ulčinas, Artūras
Jelinskas, Tadas
Eimont, Romuald
Paužienė, Neringa
Valiokas, Ramūnas
Jekabsone, Aistė
Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels
title Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels
title_full Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels
title_fullStr Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels
title_short Comparison of Microglial Morphology and Function in Primary Cerebellar Cell Cultures on Collagen and Collagen-Mimetic Hydrogels
title_sort comparison of microglial morphology and function in primary cerebellar cell cultures on collagen and collagen-mimetic hydrogels
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9139096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35625762
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10051023
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