Litcius/Paper detail

Astrocyte structural heterogeneity in the mouse hippocampus

João Filipe Viana, João Luís Machado, Daniela Sofía Abreu, Alexandra Veiga, Sara Barsanti, G. Tavares, Manuella Martins, Vanessa Morais Sardinha, Sónia Guerra‐Gomes, Cátia Domingos, Alberto Pauletti, Jérôme Wahis, Chen Liu, Corrado Calì, Christian Henneberger, Matthew G. Holt, João Filipe Oliveira

2023Glia54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Astrocytes are integral components of brain circuits, where they sense, process, and respond to surrounding activity, maintaining homeostasis and regulating synaptic transmission, the sum of which results in behavior modulation. These interactions are possible due to their complex morphology, composed of a tree-like structure of processes to cover defined territories ramifying in a mesh-like system of fine leaflets unresolved by conventional optic microscopy. While recent reports devoted more attention to leaflets and their dynamic interactions with synapses, our knowledge about the tree-like "backbone" structure in physiological conditions is incomplete. Recent transcriptomic studies described astrocyte molecular diversity, suggesting structural heterogeneity in regions such as the hippocampus, which is crucial for cognitive and emotional behaviors. In this study, we carried out the structural analysis of astrocytes across the hippocampal subfields of Cornu Ammonis area 1 (CA1) and dentate gyrus in the dorsoventral axis. We found that astrocytes display heterogeneity across the hippocampal subfields, which is conserved along the dorsoventral axis. We further found that astrocytes appear to contribute in an exocytosis-dependent manner to a signaling loop that maintains the backbone structure. These findings reveal astrocyte heterogeneity in the hippocampus, which appears to follow layer-specific cues and depend on the neuro-glial environment.

Topics & Concepts

Hippocampal formationNeuroscienceBiologyHippocampusAstrocyteDentate gyrusNerve netCentral nervous systemNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsAlzheimer's disease research and treatments