DOI: 10.1177/13872877241291142 ISSN: 1387-2877

Primary cortical cell tri-culture to study effects of amyloid-β on microglia function and neuroinflammatory response

Hyehyun Kim, Bryan Le, Noah Goshi, Kan Zhu, Ana Cristina Grodzki, Pamela J Lein, Min Zhao, Erkin Seker

Background

Microglia play a critical role in neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease, where alterations in microglial function may result in pathogenic amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation, chronic neuroinflammation, and deleterious effects on neuronal function. However, studying these complex factors in vivo, where numerous confounding processes exist, is challenging, and until recently, in vitro models have not allowed sustained culture of critical cell types in the same culture.

Objective

We employed a rat primary tri-culture (neurons, astrocytes, and microglia) model and compared it to co-culture (neurons and astrocytes) and mono-culture (microglia) to study microglial function (i.e., motility and Aβ clearance) and proteomic response to exogenous Aβ.

Methods

The cultures were exposed to fluorescently-labeled Aβ (FITC-Aβ) particles for varying durations. Epifluorescence microscopy images were analyzed to quantify the number of FITC-Aβ particles and assess cytomorphological features. Cytokine profiles from conditioned media were obtained. Live-cell imaging was employed to extract microglia motility parameters.

Results

FITC-Aβ particles were more effectively cleared in the tri-culture compared to the co-culture. This was attributed to microglia engulfing FITC-Aβ particles, as confirmed via epifluorescence and confocal microscopy. FITC-Aβ treatment significantly increased microglia size, but had no significant effect on neuronal surface coverage or astrocyte size. Upon FITC-Aβ treatment, there was a significant increase in proinflammatory cytokines in tri-culture, but not in co-culture. Aβ treatment altered microglia motility evident as a swarming-like motion.

Conclusions

The results suggest that neuron-astrocyte-microglia interactions influence microglia function and highlight the utility of the tri-culture model for studies of neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, and cell-cell communication.

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