J. Sievers et al., BLOOD MONOCYTES AND SPLEEN MACROPHAGES DIFFERENTIATE INTO MICROGLIA-LIKE CELLS WHEN CULTURED ON ASTROCYTES, Annals of anatomy, 176(1), 1994, pp. 45-51
Microglial cells are resident immunoeffector cells of the central nerv
ous system. They differ from most other resident macrophages by their
ramified shape, their capacity to proliferate, and by a distinct patte
rn of ion channels. They have therefore been proposed to be a subpopul
ation of macrophages that arise from a distinct pool of myelomonocytes
by early determination of their lineage within the bone marrow. Here
we present data which show that distinct properties of the microglial
cells are not intrinsic to this subpopulation of macrophages, but are
acquired subsequent to their interaction with astroglial cells, since
similar properties can be induced in both blood monocytes and spleen m
acrophages, when these are cultured on astrocytes. These findings add
further evidence to the proposition that microglial cells are derived
from the myelomonocytic lineage, and also indicate that the properties
of resident macrophages are largely determined by tissue components o
f the host organ.