Revisão Revisado por pares

Neuronal ‘On’ and ‘Off’ signals control microglia

2007; Elsevier BV; Volume: 30; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.tins.2007.08.007

ISSN

1878-108X

Autores

Knut Biber, Harald Neumann, Kazuhide Inoue, Hendrikus Boddeke,

Tópico(s)

Immune cells in cancer

Resumo

Recent findings indicate that neurons are not merely passive targets of microglia but rather control microglial activity. The variety of different signals that neurons use to control microglia can be divided into two categories: ‘Off’ signals constitutively keep microglia in their resting state and antagonize proinflammatory activity. ‘On’ signals are inducible and include purines, chemokines, glutamate. They instruct microglia activation under pathological conditions towards a beneficial or detrimental phenotype. Various neuronal signaling molecules thus actively control microglia function, thereby contribute to the inflammatory milieu of the central nervous system. Thus, neurons should be envisaged as key immune modulators in the brain. Recent findings indicate that neurons are not merely passive targets of microglia but rather control microglial activity. The variety of different signals that neurons use to control microglia can be divided into two categories: ‘Off’ signals constitutively keep microglia in their resting state and antagonize proinflammatory activity. ‘On’ signals are inducible and include purines, chemokines, glutamate. They instruct microglia activation under pathological conditions towards a beneficial or detrimental phenotype. Various neuronal signaling molecules thus actively control microglia function, thereby contribute to the inflammatory milieu of the central nervous system. Thus, neurons should be envisaged as key immune modulators in the brain.

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