Generation of an inducible destabilized-domain Cre mouse line to target disease associated microglia

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The function of microglia during progression of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) can be investigated using mouse models that enable genetic manipulation of microglial subpopulations in a temporal manner. We developed a mouse strain that expresses destabilized-domain Cre recombinase (DD-Cre) from the Cst7 locus ( Cst7 DD-Cre ) and tested this in 5xFAD amyloidogenic, Ai14 tdTomato cre-reporter line mice. Dietary administration of trimethoprim to induce DD-Cre activity produces long-term labeling in disease associated microglia (DAM) without evidence of leakiness, with tdTomato-expression restricted to cells surrounding plaques. Using this model, we found that DAMs are a subset of plaque-associated microglia (PAMs) and their transition to DAM increases with age and disease stage. Spatial transcriptomic analysis revealed that tdTomato+ cells show higher expression of disease and inflammatory genes compared to other microglial populations, including non-labeled PAMs. This model should allow inducible cre-loxP targeting of DAMs, without leakiness.

Highlights

  • We developed a new mouse strain which specifically enables recombination of loxP sites in disease associated microglia (DAMs) and can be used to manipulate DAM-gene expression.

  • DAMs represent a subset of plaque associated microglia (PAMs), and DAM expression increases with disease progression.

  • Spatial transcriptomic analyses reveal that DAMs have higher expression of disease and inflammatory genes compared to other PAMs.

Article activity feed