Glial Cell Biology ILO 2 - Understand the cellular and genetic differences between various glial cells in the brain Flashcards
What % of brain cells are astrocytes in mice and in humans?
Mice - 10-20%
Humans 20-40%
Name the 8 morphological classes of astrocytes and some of their features.
Protoplasmic astrocytes - found in white matter and show classic star morphology
Fiberous astrocyte - found in the white matter and show the classic star morphology
Radial astrocyte/Bergmann glia - found in the cerebellum, extremely polarised with end feet interacting with pia matter
Velate astrocyte - found in cerebellum and olfactory bulb surrounded by tightly packed neurons
Interlaminar astrocytes - cell body in molecular layer, branches extend through lamina of cortical layers
Marginal and perivascular astrocytes - extensive end feed connected to pia matter (marginal) to blood vessel (perivascular). Perivascular astrocytes have no neuronal connections (do not participate in tripartite synapse), only enwrap blood vessels
Immature astrocyte/glioblast - give rise to mature astrocytes
What are the characteristic markers of astrocytes?
Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)
Calcium binding protein (S100b)
Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family L1 (Adlh1L1)
What is the main issue with astrocyte markers?
Not all astrocytes express them e.g. only 10-20% of all cortex astrocytes express GFAP
What are the four microglia states and how does their morphology differ?
Silent/resting microglia - actively scan environment, thin processes
Activated microglia - more ‘bushy’ morphology, increased number and thicker processes
Phagocytic microglia - round, large body, less processes
Dystrophic microglia - segmented, dying
What %/number of brain cells are microglia in humans and mice?
Humans - 5-10%
3.5x10^6 in mice
What are the characteristic markers of resting microglia?
Proliferation +/- Iba1 + CD11b + Vimentin - MHC Class I antigen -
What are the characteristic markers of activated microglia?
Proliferation + Iba1 + CD11b+ Vimentin + MHC Class I antigen +
What are the characteristic markers of phagocytic microglia?
Proliferation + Iba1 + CD11b+ Vimentin + MHC Class I antigen +
What are the characteristic markers of dystrophic microglia?
Proliferation - Iba1 + CD11b+ Vimentin + MHC Class I antigen +
How many types of oligodendrocyte are there?
4
What are the similarities and differences between Type1 and Type2 oligodendrocytes?
Similarities - relatively small cell body, 4-5 processes from soma, enwrap axons with diameter <2um, wrap up to 30 axons
Most common in the CNS
Differences - Type 1 enwrap axons in any direction, type 2 - enwrap parallel axons
What are the 3 different morphologies of type 1 oligodendrocytes?
Ramified
Stellar
Smooth
What are the features of type 3 oligodendrocytes?
Small body, few branches, 1-2 primary processes, enwrap thicker axons ~50uM in diameter, enwrap fewer axons
What are the features of type 4 oligodendrocytes?
Enwrap very thick axons, only a single branch extending from cell body
Rarely found in mice - nerves not thick enough
What are the characteristics of NG2 glia/polydendrocytes?
Morphologically similar to astrocytes
Cell marker is neuroglia antigen 2 (NG2)
Cannot produce myelin
Important in generating new brain cells
What are the characteristic markers of oligodendrocytes?
Olig2 - oligodendrocyte transcription factor
Myelin basic protein (MBP)
Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)
Myelin proteolipid protein (PLP)