INSERM: A joint study conducted by Inserm researchers from IBENS
(Institute of Biology of the Ecole Normale Supérieure – Inserm/CNRS/ENS)
in Paris and researchers from SIgN (Singapore Immunology Network,
A*STAR) in Singapore reveals a hitherto undiscovered impact of
microbiota on immune brain cells, occurring from fetal stages. These
cells, called microglia, which are known players in brain development
and functioning, differentially respond to microbiome perturbations in
male or female mice. These results are published in Cell.
Microglia are immune cells that respond to traumatic injury or
inflammatory signals to protect the brain, acting as sensors of various
environmental signals. In addition to their role as immune sentinels,
microglia have also been show to regulate several steps of brain wiring
and functioning. Consistently, microglia dysfunction has been linked
with the etiology of several neurodegenerative diseases and
neurodevelopmental disorders, including Schizophrenia or Autism Spectrum
Disorders. Microglia therefore play major roles in brain circuits and
could constitute an entry point for environmental signals.
To test this hypothesis, Morgane Thion and Sonia Garel, Inserm
researchers, together with their associates, used a multidisciplinary
approach involving germ-free mice, which lack all the microbiome, and
adult mice treated with antibiotics, which acutely destroys the gut
flora. Through a combination of global genomic analyses and histological
studies, researchers have shown that microglia are profoundly affected
by microbiota disruption, already from prenatal stages. Strikingly, the
impact of the microbiome on microglia depended on the sexual identity
and the age: microglia of males were perturbed prenatally whereas those
of females were affected in adulthood. This surprising sexual dimorphism
echoes the fact that many neurodevelopmental disorders have a higher
incidence in men, whereas autoimmune diseases are more prevalent in
women.
While the underlying mechanisms and consequences remain to be
discovered, this study reveals a key role of microglia at the
brain/environment interface and shows that males and females have
distinct susceptibilities time windows to microbiome alterations. For
the authors, these elements should be systematically taken into
consideration at preclinical and clinical level.