“…Both S1R and BDNF were present in BV-2 microglial cells, yet treating these cells with an S1R agonist did not facilitate BDNF secretion. Although activated microglia (Nakajima et al, 2001; Sun et al, 2014), including a murine N9 microglial cell line (Gomes et al, 2013), are capable of secreting BDNF, our finding is in agreement with numerous studies indicating that the S1R is present in microglia and can modulate injury or toxicant-induced microgliosis by various mechanisms not involving BDNF (Behensky et al, 2013; Cuevas et al, 2011; Dong et al, 2015; Gekker et al, 2006; Hall et al, 2009; Mancuso et al, 2012; Moritz et al, 2015; Robson et al, 2013; Wegleiter et al, 2014; Wu et al, 2015; Zhao et al, 2014). Alternatively, the BV-2 cell line may lack the necessary machinery for investigating S1R-BDNF interactions in microglia or the microglia may need to be activated in order to study the effect.…”