Epigenetic control of microglial developmental milestones from proliferative progenitors to efficient phagocytes

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

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

Early immune perturbations increase the risk of neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders, yet the mechanisms underlying the maturation of microglia, the resident immune cells of the brain parenchyma, remain poorly defined. Specifically, how proliferation, morphological differentiation, and phagocytosis are coordinated among microglia progenitors as they colonize the embryonic brain remains unclear. Here, we combined mathematical modeling with spatiotemporal analyses of the murine hippocampus and cerebellum from postnatal day 2 (P2) to P60 to reconstruct the trajectory of microglial development. We identified a proliferative-to-quiescent (P/Q) switch around P3/P4 that preceded the acquisition of morphological complexity and efficient phagocytosis and was accompanied by coordinated shifts in cell-cycle dynamics and metabolic state. Strikingly, this P/Q switch was recapitulated in repopulation contexts in mice and in the human fetal brain, where later stages displayed enhanced phagocytic function coupled to reduced proliferation. Perturbing the proliferative phase through pharmacological or genetic disruption of CSF1R signaling impaired subsequent microglial complexity and phagocytosis efficiency, revealing an unexpected reliance of phagocytosis on proliferation-driven colonization. Finally, we show that microglia stepwise maturation during development is associated with chromatin remodeling and driven by the epigenetic regulator Ikaros. Together, these findings uncover the sequential milestones of microglial development, revealing a potential period of early vulnerability and establishing an unexpected linkage between proliferation and phagocytosis essential to understanding how these processes are coordinated in neurodegenerative disorders.

Article activity feed