Pu.1/Spi1 dosage controls the turnover and maintenance of microglia in zebrafish and mammals
Abstract
Microglia are brain-resident macrophages playing pivotal roles in CNS development and homeostasis. Yet, the cellular and molecular basis governing microglia maintenance remains largely unknown. Here, via utilizing a visible conditional knockout allele ofpu.1gene (the master regulator for microglia/macrophage lineage development) to generate mosaic microglia populations in adult zebrafish, we show that whilepu.1-deficient microglia are immediate viable, they are less competitive and chronically eliminated through Tp53-mediated cell competition. Interestingly, when conditionally inactivating Pu.1 in adultspi-b(the orthologue of mouseSpi-b) null mutants, microglia are rapidly depleted via apoptosis, suggesting that Pu.1 and Spi-b regulate microglia maintenance in a dosage-dependent manner. The dosage-dependent regulation of microglia maintenance by PU.1 is evolutionarily conserved in mice, as shown by conditionally inactivating single and bothPu.1alleles in microglia respectively. Collectively, our study reveals the conserved cellular and molecular mechanisms controlling microglia turnover and maintenance in teleost and mammals.
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