The role of intracellular calcium‐store‐mediated calcium signals in <i>in vivo</i> sensor and effector functions of microglia
Kuang Pan, Olga Garaschuk
Abstract
Abstract Under physiological conditions microglia, the immune sentinels of the brain, constantly monitor their microenvironment. In the case of danger, damage or cell/tissue dyshomeostasis, they react with changes in process motility, polarization, directed process movement, morphology and gene expression profile; release pro‐ and anti‐inflammatory mediators; proliferate; and clean brain parenchyma by means of phagocytosis. Based on recent transcriptomic and in vivo Ca 2+ imaging data, we argue that the local cell/tissue dyshomeostasis is sensed by microglia via intracellular Ca 2+ signals, many of which are mediated by Ca 2+ release from the intracellular Ca 2+ stores. These signals encode the strength, duration and spatiotemporal pattern of the stimulus and, at the same time, relay this information further to trigger the respective Ca 2+ ‐dependent effector pathways. We also point to the fact that microglial Ca 2+ signalling is sexually dimorphic and undergoes profound changes across the organism's lifespan. Interestingly, the first changes in microglial Ca 2+ signalling are visible already in 9‐ to 11‐month‐old mice, roughly corresponding to 40‐year‐old humans. image