BIOSS
Centre for Biological Signalling Studies

Macrophages at CNS interfaces: ontogeny and function in health and disease

Kierdorf K, Masuda T, Jordão MJC, Prinz M.

Nat Rev Neurosci. 2019;20(9):547-562

Nat Rev Neurosci.             online article

The segregation and limited regenerative capacity of the CNS necessitate a specialized and tightly regulated resident immune system that continuously guards the CNS against invading pathogens and injury. Immunity in the CNS has generally been attributed to neuron-associated microglia in the parenchyma, whose origin and functions have recently been elucidated. However, there are several other specialized macrophage populations at the CNS borders, including dural, leptomeningeal, perivascular and choroid plexus macrophages (collectively known as CNS-associated macrophages (CAMs)), whose origins and roles in health and disease have remained largely uncharted. Recent studies that have been empowered by major technological advances have shed new light on these cells and suggest central roles for CAMs in CNS physiology and in the pathogenesis of diseases.