Microglial Morphology and Population Density in Autism Spectrum Disorder Superficial Temporal Cortical Tissue

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Rezaei, Rachel Z.

Issue Date

2020-05-01

Type

Thesis

Language

en_US

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is prevalent in an estimated 1% of the global population and is characterized by abnormal neural connectivity and increased immunological anomalies (Lai et al., 2014). It remains unclear whether abnormal connectivity of cortical neurons is directly associated with inflammatory activity in the ASD brain. This study analyzed microglia, a specialized glial cell that functions as the central nervous system's main immune cell. Inflammatory microglia may contribute to neurological changes observed in ASD. We examined microglia density in superficial cortical layers (II/III) of human post-mortem ASD temporal lobe using Nissl and evaluate microglial cell body morphology for signs of inflammation. Our results found an increased density of microglia in ASD versus neurotypical tissue as well as the increased average size of microglia cell bodies in ASD temporal cortex. These results support the idea that in ASD subjects' temporal cortex there is evidence of glial immune system activation.

Description

The University of Nevada, Reno Libraries will promptly respond to removal requests related to content that violates intellectual property laws, data protections, or has been uploaded without creator consent. Takedown notices should be directed to our ScholarWolf team (scholarwolf@library.unr.edu) with information about the object, including its full URL and the nature of your complaint.

Citation

Publisher

License

In Copyright

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN