Microglia determine an immune-challenged environment and facilitate ibuprofen action in human retinal organoids
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Author
Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation
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Abstract
Prenatal immune challenges pose significant risks to human embryonic brain and eye development. However, our knowledge about the safe usage of anti-inflammatory drugs during pregnancy is still limited. While human induced pluripotent stem cells (hIPSC)-derived brain organoid models have started to explore functional consequences upon viral stimulation, these models commonly lack microglia, which are susceptible to and promote inflammation. Furthermore, microglia are actively involved in neuronal development. Here, we generate hIPSC-derived microglia precursor cells and assemble them into retinal organoids. Once the outer plexiform layer forms, these hIPSC-derived microglia (iMG) fully integrate into the retinal organoids. Since the ganglion cell survival declines by this time in 3D-retinal organoids, we adapted the model into 2D and identify that the improved ganglion cell number significantly decreases only with iMG presence. In parallel, we applied the immunostimulant POLY(I:C) to mimic a fetal viral infection. While POLY(I:C) exposure alters the iMG phenotype, it does not hinder their interaction with ganglion cells. Furthermore, iMG significantly enhance the supernatant’s inflammatory secretome and increase retinal cell proliferation. Simultaneous exposure with the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) ibuprofen dampens POLY(I:C)-mediated changes of the iMG phenotype and ameliorates cell proliferation. Remarkably, while POLY(I:C) disrupts neuronal calcium dynamics independent of iMG, ibuprofen rescues this effect only if iMG are present. Mechanistically, ibuprofen targets the enzymes cyclooxygenase 1 and 2 (COX1/PTGS1 and COX2/PTGS2) simultaneously, from which iMG mainly express COX1. Selective COX1 blockage fails to restore the calcium peak amplitude upon POLY(I:C) stimulation, suggesting ibuprofen’s beneficial effect depends on the presence and interplay of COX1 and COX2. These findings underscore the importance of microglia in the context of prenatal immune challenges and provide insight into the mechanisms by which ibuprofen exerts its protective effects during embryonic development.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-04-03
Journal Title
Journal of Neuroinflammation
Publisher
Springer Nature
Acknowledgement
We thank the scientific service units at ISTA, specifically the Lab Support Facility (LSF), the Molecular Biology Services/Virus Services Team, specifically Flavia Gama Gomes Leite and Mark Andrew Smyth, for the virus production, and the Imaging and Optics Facility (IOF). We thank all members of the Siegert group and Marco Benevento for their constant feedback on the project and comments on the manuscript. A special thanks to Rouven Schulz for input on statistical analysis and sharing R-scripts, Gloria Colombo for the introduction to cell sorting, Negar Vehdani and Florianne Schoot Uiterkamp for their support in cell culture. This research was supported by the Gesellschaft für Forschungsförderung Niederösterreich (grant No. Sc19-017 to V.H.).
Acknowledged SSUs
Volume
22
Issue
1
Article Number
98
eISSN
IST-REx-ID
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