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Characteristics of the Alternative Phenotype of Microglia/Macrophages and its Modulation in Experimental Gliomas
Author(s) -
Konrad Gabrusiewicz,
Aleksandra EllertMiklaszewska,
Maciej Lipko,
Małgorzata Sielska,
Marta Frankowska,
Bożena Kamińska
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0023902
Subject(s) - microglia , glioma , chemokine , cancer research , angiogenesis , integrin alpha m , biology , ccl3 , phenotype , tumor microenvironment , flow cytometry , immunology , pathology , immune system , inflammation , ccl2 , medicine , biochemistry , gene
Microglia (brain resident macrophages) accumulate in malignant gliomas and instead of initiating the anti-tumor response, they switch to a pro-invasive phenotype, support tumor growth, invasion, angiogenesis and immunosuppression by release of cytokines/chemokines and extracellular matrix proteases. Using immunofluorescence and flow cytometry, we demonstrate an early accumulation of activated microglia followed by accumulation of macrophages in experimental murine EGFP-GL261 gliomas. Those cells acquire the alternative phenotype, as evidenced by evaluation of the production of ten pro/anti-inflammatory cytokines and expression profiling of 28 genes in magnetically-sorted CD11b + cells from tumor tissues. Furthermore, we show that infiltration of implanted gliomas by amoeboid, Iba1-positive cells can be reduced by a systematically injected cyclosporine A (CsA) two or eight days after cell inoculation. The up-regulated levels of IL-10 and GM-CSF, increased expression of genes characteristic for the alternative and pro-invasive phenotype ( arg-1 , mt1-mmp , cxcl14 ) in glioma-derived CD11b + cells as well as enhanced angiogenesis and tumor growth were reduced in CsA-treated mice. Our findings define for the first time kinetics and biochemical characteristics of glioma-infiltrating microglia/macrophages. Inhibition of the alternative activation of tumor-infiltrating macrophages significantly reduced tumor growth. Thus, blockade of microglia/macrophage infiltration and their pro-invasive functions could be a novel therapeutic strategy in malignant gliomas.

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