Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9194637 Journal of Neuroimmunology 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
We derived microglia from mouse embryonic stem cells (ES cells) at very high density. Using the markers Mac1+/CD45low and Mac1+/CD45high to define microglia and macrophages, respectively, we show that Mac1+ cells are induced by GM-CSF stimulation following neuronal differentiation of mouse ES cells using a five-step method. CD45low expression was high and CD45high expression was low on induced cells. We used a density gradient method to obtain a large amount of microglia-like cells, approximately 90% of Mac1+ cells. Microglia-like cells expressed MHC class I, class II, CD40, CD80, CD86, and IFN-γR. The expression level of these molecules on microglia-like cells was barely enhanced by IFN-γ. Intravenously transferred GFP+ microglia derived from GFP+ ES cells selectively accumulated in brain but not in peripheral tissues such as spleen and lymph node. GFP+ cells were detected mainly in corpus callosum and hippocampus but were rarely seen in cerebral cortex, where Iba1, another marker of microglia, is primarily expressed. Furthermore, both GFP+ and Iba1+ cells exhibited a ramified morphology characteristic of mature microglia. These studies suggest that ES cell-derived microglia-like cells obtained using our protocol are functional and migrate selectively into the brain but not into peripheral tissues after intravenous transplantation.
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