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1.
Microglial cells are monocytic lineage cells that reside in the CNS and have the capacity to become activated during various pathological conditions. Although it was demonstrated that activation of microglial cells could be achieved in vitro by the engagement of CD40-CD40L interactions in combination with proinflammatory cytokines, the exact factors that mediate activation of microglial cells in vivo during CNS autoimmunity are ill-defined. To investigate the role of CD40 in microglial cell activation during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), we used bone marrow chimera mice that allowed us to distinguish microglial cells from peripheral macrophages and render microglial cells deficient in CD40. We found that the first step of microglial cell activation was CD40-independent and occurred during EAE onset. The first step of activation consisted of microglial cell proliferation and up-regulation of the activation markers MHC class II, CD40, and CD86. At the peak of disease, microglial cells underwent a second step of activation, which was characterized by a further enhancement in activation marker expression along with a reduction in proliferation. The second step of microglial cell activation was CD40-dependent and the failure of CD40-deficient microglial cells to achieve a full level of activation during EAE was correlated with reduced expansion of encephalitogenic T cells and leukocyte infiltration in the CNS, and amelioration of clinical symptoms. Thus, our findings demonstrate that CD40 expression on microglial cells is necessary to complete their activation process during EAE, which is important for disease progression.  相似文献   

2.
Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis is a T cell-mediated demyelinating disease of the CNS that serves as a model for the human disease multiple sclerosis. Increased expression of the chemokine CCL2 in the CNS has been demonstrated to be important in the development of demyelinating disease presumably by attracting inflammatory cells. However, the mechanism of how CCL2 regulates disease pathogenesis has not been fully elucidated. Using radiation bone marrow chimeric mice we demonstrated that optimum disease was achieved when CCL2 was glia derived. Furthermore, CNS production of CCL2 resulted in the accumulation of iNOS-producing CD11b(+)CD11c(+) dendritic cells and TNF-producing macrophages important for demyelination. Lack of glial-derived CCL2 production did not influence experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by altering either Th1 or Th17 cells, as there were no differences in these populations in the CNS or periphery between groups. These results demonstrate that the glial-derived CCL2 is important for the attraction of TNF- and iNOS-producing dendritic cells and effector macrophages to the CNS for development of subsequent autoimmune disease.  相似文献   

3.
Cells that can participate in an innate immune response within the central nervous system (CNS) include infiltrating cells (polymorphonuclear leukocytes [PMNs], macrophages, and natural killer [NK] cells) and resident cells (microglia and sometimes astrocytes). The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) is produced by all of these cells and has been implicated in the development of behavioral seizures in the Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV)-induced seizure model. The assessment, via PCR arrays, of the mRNA expression levels of a large number of chemokines (ligands and receptors) in TMEV-infected and mock-infected C57BL/6 mice both with and without seizures did not clearly demonstrate the involvement of PMNs, monocytes/macrophages, or NK cells in the development of seizures, possibly due to overlapping function of the chemokines. Additionally, C57BL/6 mice unable to recruit or depleted of infiltrating PMNs and NK cells had seizure rates comparable to those of controls following TMEV infection, and therefore PMNs and NK cells do not significantly contribute to seizure development. In contrast, C57BL/6 mice treated with minocycline, which affects monocytes/macrophages, microglial cells, and PMNs, had significantly fewer seizures than controls following TMEV infection, indicating monocytes/macrophages and resident microglial cells are important in seizure development. Irradiated bone marrow chimeric mice that were either IL-6-deficient mice reconstituted with wild-type bone marrow cells or wild-type mice reconstituted with IL-6-deficient bone marrow cells developed significantly fewer behavioral seizures following TMEV infection. Therefore, both resident CNS cells and infiltrating cells are necessary for seizure development.  相似文献   

4.
Cannabinoids are potential agents for the development of therapeutic strategies against multiple sclerosis. Here we analyzed the role of the peripheral CB(2) cannabinoid receptor in the control of myeloid progenitor cell trafficking toward the inflamed spinal cord and their contribution to microglial activation in an animal model of multiple sclerosis (experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, EAE). CB(2) receptor knock-out mice showed an exacerbated clinical score of the disease when compared with their wild-type littermates, and this occurred in concert with extended axonal loss, T-lymphocyte (CD4(+)) infiltration, and microglial (CD11b(+)) activation. Immature bone marrow-derived CD34(+) myeloid progenitor cells, which play a role in neuroinflammatory pathologies, were shown to express CB(2) receptors and to be abundantly recruited toward the spinal cords of CB(2) knock-out EAE mice. Bone marrow-derived cell transfer experiments further evidenced the increased contribution of these cells to microglial replenishment in the spinal cords of CB(2)-deficient animals. In line with these observations, selective pharmacological CB(2) activation markedly reduced EAE symptoms, axonal loss, and microglial activation. CB(2) receptor manipulation altered the expression pattern of different chemokines (CCL2, CCL3, CCL5) and their receptors (CCR1, CCR2), thus providing a mechanistic explanation for its role in myeloid progenitor recruitment during neuroinflammation. These findings demonstrate the protective role of CB(2) receptors in EAE pathology; provide evidence for a new site of CB(2) receptor action, namely the targeting of myeloid progenitor trafficking and its contribution to microglial activation; and support the potential use of non-psychoactive CB(2) agonists in therapeutic strategies for multiple sclerosis and other neuroinflammatory disorders.  相似文献   

5.
CD24 is a cell surface glycoprotein that is expressed on both immune cells and cells of the CNS. We have previously shown that CD24 is required for the induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an experimental model for the human disease multiple sclerosis (MS). The development of EAE requires CD24 expression on both T cells and non-T host cells in the CNS. To understand the role of CD24 on the resident cells in the CNS during EAE development, we created CD24 bone marrow chimeras and transgenic mice in which CD24 expression was under the control of a glial fibrillary acidic protein promotor (AstroCD24TG mice). We showed that mice lacking CD24 expression on the CNS resident cells developed a mild form of EAE; in contrast, mice with overexpression of CD24 in the CNS developed severe EAE. Compared with nontransgenic mice, the CNS of AstroCD24TG mice had higher expression of cytokine genes such as IL-17 and demyelination-associated marker P8; the CNS of AstroCD24TG mice accumulated higher numbers of Th17 and total CD4+ T cells, whereas CD4+ T cells underwent more proliferation during EAE development. Expression of CD24 in CD24-deficient astrocytes also enhanced their costimulatory activity to myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-specific, TCR-transgenic 2D2 T cells. Thus, CD24 on the resident cells in the CNS enhances EAE development via costimulation of encephalitogenic T cells. Because CD24 is increased drastically on resident cells in the CNS during EAE, our data have important implications for CD24-targeted therapy of MS.  相似文献   

6.
Microglia, which are CNS-resident neuroimmune cells, transform their morphology and size in response to CNS damage, switching to an activated state with distinct functions and gene expression profiles. The roles of microglial activation in health, injury and disease remain incompletely understood due to their dynamic and complex regulation in response to changes in their microenvironment. Thus, it is critical to non-invasively monitor and analyze changes in microglial activation over time in the intact organism. In vivo studies of microglial activation have been delayed by technical limitations to tracking microglial behavior without altering the CNS environment. This has been particularly challenging during chronic neurodegeneration, where long-term changes must be tracked. The retina, a CNS organ amenable to non-invasive live imaging, offers a powerful system to visualize and characterize the dynamics of microglia activation during chronic disorders.This protocol outlines methods for long-term, in vivo imaging of retinal microglia, using confocal ophthalmoscopy (cSLO) and CX3CR1GFP/+ reporter mice, to visualize microglia with cellular resolution. Also, we describe methods to quantify monthly changes in cell activation and density in large cell subsets (200-300 cells per retina). We confirm the use of somal area as a useful metric for live tracking of microglial activation in the retina by applying automated threshold-based morphometric analysis of in vivo images. We use these live image acquisition and analyses strategies to monitor the dynamic changes in microglial activation and microgliosis during early stages of retinal neurodegeneration in a mouse model of chronic glaucoma. This approach should be useful to investigate the contributions of microglia to neuronal and axonal decline in chronic CNS disorders that affect the retina and optic nerve.  相似文献   

7.
Microglial activation is one of the earliest and most prominent features of nearly all CNS neuropathologies often occurring prior to other indicators of overt neuropathology. Whether microglial activation in seemingly healthy CNS tissue during the early stages of several is a response to early stages of neuronal or glial distress or an early sign of microglial dysfunction causing subsequent neurodegeneration is unknown. Here we characterize and discuss how changes in the CNS microenvironment (neuronal activity/viability, glial activation) lead to specific forms of microglial activation. Specifically, we examine the potential role that TREM-2 expressing microglia may play in regulating the effector function of autoreactive T cell responses. Thus, we suggest that ubiquitous suppression of microglial activation during CNS inflammatory disorders rather than targeted manipulation of microglial activation, may in the end be maladaptive leading to incomplete remission of symptoms.  相似文献   

8.
Activation of microglia, the resident macrophages in the CNS, plays a significant role in neuronal death or degeneration in a broad spectrum of CNS disorders. Recent studies indicate that nanomolar concentrations of the serine protease, thrombin, can activate microglia in culture. However, in contrast to other neural cells responsive to thrombin, the participation of novel protease-activated receptors (PARs), such as the prototypic thrombin receptor PAR1, in thrombin-induced microglial activation was cast in doubt. In this report, by utilizing primary microglial cultures from PAR1 knockout (PAR1-/-) mice, application of the PAR1 active peptide TRAP-6 (SFLLRN) in comparison to a scrambled peptide (LFLNR), we have unambiguously demonstrated that murine microglia constitutively express PAR1 mRNA that is translated into fully functional protein. Activation of the microglial PAR1 induces a rapid cytosolic free [Ca2+]i increase and transient activation of both p38 and p44/42 mitogen-activated protein kinases. Moreover, although in part, this PAR1 activation directly contributes to thrombin-induced microglial proliferation. Furthermore, although not directly inducing tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) release, PAR1 activation up-regulates microglial CD40 expression and potentiates CD40 ligand-induced TNF-alpha production, thus indirectly contributing to microglial activation. Taken together, these results demonstrate an essential role of PAR1 in thrombin-induced microglial activation. In addition, strategies aimed at blocking thrombin signaling through PAR1 may be therapeutically valuable for diseases associated with cerebral vascular damage and significant inflammation with microglial activation.  相似文献   

9.
Osteoclasts are essential cells for bone erosion in inflammatory arthritis and are derived from cells in the myeloid lineage. Recently, we reported that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha) increases the blood osteoclast precursor (OCP) numbers in arthritic patients and animals, which are reduced by anti-TNF therapy, implying that circulating OCPs may have an important role in the pathogenesis of erosive arthritis. The aim of this study is to investigate the mechanism by which TNFalpha induces this increase in OCP frequency. We found that TNFalpha stimulated cell division and conversion of CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo/c-Fms- to CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo/c-Fms+ cells, which was not blocked by neutralizing macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) antibody. Ex vivo analysis of monocytes demonstrated the following: (i) blood CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo but not CD11b-/Gr-1- cells give rise to osteoclasts when they were cultured with receptor activator NF-kappaB ligand and M-CSF; and (ii) TNF-transgenic mice have a significant increase in blood CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo cells and bone marrow proliferating CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo cells. Administration of TNFalpha to wild type mice induced bone marrow CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo cell proliferation, which was associated with an increase in CD11b+/Gr-1-/lo OCPs in the circulation. Thus, TNFalpha directly stimulates bone marrow OCP genesis by enhancing c-Fms expression. This results in progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation in response to M-CSF, leading to an enlargement of the marrow OCP pool. Increased marrow OCPs subsequently egress to the circulation, forming a basis for elevated OCP frequency. Therefore, the first step of TNF-induced osteoclastogenesis is at the level of OCP genesis in the bone marrow, which represents another layer of regulation to control erosive disease.  相似文献   

10.
Osteoclasts are multinucleated giant cells that originate from a monocyte/macrophage lineage, and are involved in the inflammatory bone destruction accompanied by periodontitis. Recent studies have shown that osteoclast precursors reside not only in the bone marrow, but also in the peripheral blood and spleen, though the precise characteristics of each precursor have not been analyzed. We hypothesized that the number of osteoclast precursors in those tissues may increase under pathological conditions and contribute to osteoclast formation in vivo in a mouse model. To test this hypothesis, we attempted to identify cell populations that possess osteoclast differentiation potential in the bone marrow, spleen, and blood by analyzing macrophage/monocyte-related cell surface markers such as CD11b, CD14, and colony-stimulating factor-1 receptor (c-Fms). In the bone marrow, the CD11b? cell population, but not the CD11b+ cell population, differentiated into osteoclasts in the presence of receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand and macrophage colony-stimulating factor. On the other hand, in the spleen and blood, CD11b+ cells differentiated into osteoclasts. Interestingly, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration to the mice dramatically increased the proportion of CD11b+ c-Fms+ CD14+ cells, which differentiated into osteoclasts, in the bone marrow and spleen. These results suggest that LPS administration increases the proportion of a distinct cell population expressing CD11b+, c-Fms+, and CD14+ in the bone marrow and spleen. Thus, these cell populations are considered to contribute to the increase in osteoclast number during inflammatory bone destruction such as periodontitis.  相似文献   

11.
In Wernicke’s encephalopathy and thiamine deficiency (TD), the cause of this brain disorder, development of inflammation is an important aspect of the disease process. How this pathological mechanism relates to the neurologic impairment associated with TD, however, remains unclear. A key feature of the inflammatory process is the activation of microglia. In the present study, we evaluated the role of microglial activation in the pathophysiology of TD by examining the relationship between levels of CD11b/c and CD68, two proteins associated with microglial activation, and neurological dysfunction under conditions of TD. Rats with TD showed large increases in expression of both CD11b/c and CD68 in the vulnerable thalamus and inferior colliculus, with no change in mRNA levels in the relatively non-vulnerable frontal cortex. These alterations in CD11b/c and CD68 expression were reflected in dramatic upregulation of both proteins by immunoblotting and immunohistochemical methods. Co-treatment of rats with TD and the anti-inflammatory drug minocycline prevented microglial activation, and onset of neurological changes, including loss of righting reflex, was delayed by approximately 39 h, compared to animals with TD alone. In addition, co-treatment of rats with TD and N-acetylcysteine prevented the increase in CD11b/c and CD68, but did not alter the onset of neurological impairment. These results suggest that microglial activation plays a role in the development of neurological impairment in TD and possibly Wernicke’s encephalopathy, and that while development of oxidative stress may be involved in microglial activation, the basis of this neurologic dysfunction is likely to be multifactorial in nature.  相似文献   

12.
CD11b is an alpha chain of the leukocyte beta(2)-integrin, Mac-1, which mediates binding and extravasation of leukocytes. Because this event is critical in atherosclerosis, we examined the role of CD11b in lesion formation. Atherosclerosis-susceptible, low density lipoprotein receptor-deficient (LDL-R(-/)-) mice were irradiated and repopulated with bone marrow cells from CD11b-deficient (CD11b(-/)-) mice. After 4 weeks, <2% of the peripheral blood leukocytes of the CD11b(-/)- bone marrow-transplanted LDL-R(-/)- mice expressed CD11b, whereas approximately 25% of the CD11b(+/)+ bone marrow-transplanted LDL-R(-/)- mice expressed CD11b. After consuming a high-fat diet for 16 weeks the mean lesion aortic valve area, cholesterol accumulation in the aorta, and the degree of intimal macrophage infiltration were similar in mice reconstituted with either CD11b(+)(/+) or CD11b(-/)- bone marrow cells.The studies confirm that CD11b expression of bone marrow-derived cells does not influence the development of atherosclerosis in hypercholesterolemic LDL-R(-/)- mice.  相似文献   

13.
Lupus glomerulonephritis is initiated by deposition of IgG-containing immune complexes in renal glomeruli. FcR engagement by immune complexes (IC) is crucial to disease development as uncoupling this pathway in FcRgamma(-/-) abrogates inflammatory responses in (NZB x NZW)F1 mice. To define the roles of FcR-bearing hemopoietic cells and of kidney resident mesangial cells in pathogenesis, (NZB x NZW)F1 bone marrow chimeras were generated. Nephritis developed in (NZB x NZW)F1 mice expressing activating FcRs in hemopoietic cells. Conversely, recipients of FcRgamma(-/-) bone marrow were protected from disease development despite persistent expression of FcRgamma in mesangial cell populations. Thus, activating FcRs on circulating hemopoietic cells, rather than on mesangial cells, are required for IC-mediated pathogenesis in (NZB x NZW)F1. Transgenic FcRgamma(-/-) mice expressing FcRgamma limited to the CD11b+ monocyte/macrophage compartment developed glomerulonephritis in the anti-glomerular basement disease model, whereas nontransgenic FcRgamma(-/-) mice were completely protected. Thus, direct activation of circulating FcR-bearing myeloid cells, including monocytes/macrophages, by glomerular IC deposits is sufficient to initiate inflammatory responses.  相似文献   

14.
The objective of our study was to determine granulocyte‐macrophage colony‐stimulating factor (GM‐CSF) activity in the brain following GM‐CSF induction. We injected recombinant mouse GM‐CSF into the brains of 8‐month‐old C57BL6 mice via intracerebroventricular injections and studied the activities of microglia, astrocytes, and neurons. We also sought to determine whether an anti‐GM‐CSF antibody could suppress endogenous microglial activity in the C57BL6 mice and could also suppress microglial activity induced by the recombinant mouse GM‐CSF in another group of C57BL6 mice. Using quantitative real‐time RT‐PCR, we assessed microglial, astrocytic, and neuronal activity by measuring mRNA expression of pro‐inflammatory cytokines, GFAP, and the neuronal marker NeuN in the cerebral cortex tissues from C57BL6 mice. We performed immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry of activated microglia in different regions of the brains from control (phosphate‐buffered saline‐injected C57BL6 mice) and experimental mice (recombinant GM‐CSF‐injected C57BL6 mice, GM‐CSF antibody‐injected C57BL6 mice, and recombinant mouse GM‐CSF plus anti‐GM‐CSF antibody‐injected C57BL6 mice). We found increased mRNA expression of CD40 (9.75‐fold), tumor necrosis factor‐alpha (2.1‐fold), CD45 (1.73‐fold), and CD11c (1.70‐fold) in the cerebral cortex of C57BL6 mice that were induced with recombinant GM‐CSF, compared with control mice. Further, the anti‐GM‐CSF antibody suppressed microglia in mice that were induced with recombinant GM‐CSF. Our immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry findings of GM‐CSF‐associated cytokines in C57BL6 mice induced with recombinant GM‐CSF, in C57BL6 mice injected with the anti‐GM‐CSF antibody, and in C57BL6 mice injected with recombinant mouse GM‐CSF plus anti‐GM‐CSF antibody concurred with our real‐time RT‐PCR findings. These findings suggest that GM‐CSF is critical for microglial activation and that anti‐GM‐CSF antibody suppresses microglial activity in the CNS. The findings from this study may have implications for anti‐inflammatory effects of Alzheimer’s disease and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis mice (a multiple sclerosis mouse model).  相似文献   

15.
Thiamine deficiency (TD) models the selective neurodegeneration that accompanies the mild impairment of oxidative metabolism, which is observed in a variety of neurodegenerative diseases. Several markers of inflammation accompany neuronal death in TD and in these diseases. Studies in the submedial thalamic nucleus (SmTN), the region most sensitive to TD, have begun to define the temporal response of inflammation, immune response and neurodegeneration. Our previous studies show that the immune response is involved in TD-induced neurodegeneration. The current experiments tested the roles of other inflammatory cascades in TD-induced neuronal death. Deletion of genes for CD4, or CD8 (the co-receptors for T-cells), IFN-gamma (the cytokine produced by T-cell), or NADPH oxidase (the inflammation related oxidase) were tested. None protected against neuronal death in late stages of TD. On the other hand, deletion of the genes for CD4, CD8 and IFN-gamma increased the microglial activation, and deletion of the gene for NADPH oxidase decreased microglial activation when compared to control mice. In wild type mice, TD caused hypertrophy of CD68 positive microglia without increasing the number of microglia. However, TD induced hypertrophy and proliferation of CD68-positive microglia in the CD4 (97%), CD8 (57%) or IFN-gamma (96%) genetic knockout mice. In the genetic knockout mice for NADPH oxidase, the microglial activation was 65% less than the wild type mice. The results demonstrate that mice deficient in specific T cells (CD4-/-, CD8-/-) or activated T cell product, (IFN-gamma-/-) have increased microglia activation, but mice deficient in NADPH oxidase have decreased microglial activation. However, at the time point tested, the deletions were not neuroprotective. The results suggest that inflammatory responses play a role in TD-induced pathological changes in the brain, and the inflammation appears to be a late event that reflects a response to neuronal damage, which may spread the damage to other brain regions.  相似文献   

16.
The brain represents a significant barrier for protective immune responses in both infectious disease and cancer. We have recently demonstrated that immunotherapy with anti-CD40 and IL-2 can protect mice against disseminated Cryptococcus infection. We now applied this immunotherapy using a direct cerebral cryptococcosis model to study direct effects in the brain. Administration of anti-CD40 and IL-2 significantly prolonged the survival time of mice infected intracerebrally with Cryptococcus neoformans. The protection was correlated with activation of microglial cells indicated by the up-regulation of MHC II expression on brain CD45(low)CD11b(+) cells. CD4(+) T cells were not required for either the microglial cell activation or anticryptococcal efficacy induced by this immunotherapy. Experiments with IFN-gamma knockout mice and IFN-gammaR knockout mice demonstrated that IFN-gamma was critical for both microglial cell activation and the anticryptococcal efficacy induced by anti-CD40/IL-2. Interestingly, while peripheral IFN-gamma production and microglial cell activation were observed early after treatment, negligible IFN-gamma was detected locally in the brain. These studies indicate that immunotherapy using anti-CD40 and IL-2 can augment host immunity directly in the brain against C. neoformans infection and that IFN-gamma is essential for this effect.  相似文献   

17.
Chronic progression of two T cell-mediated central nervous system (CNS) demyelinating models of multiple sclerosis, relapsing EAE (R-EAE) and Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus-induced demyelinating disease (TMEV-IDD) is dependent on the activation of T cells to endogenous myelin epitopes (epitope spreading). Using transfer of carboxyfluorescein succinyl ester (CFSE)-labeled T-cell receptor (TCR)-transgenic T cells and mixed bone marrow chimeras, we show that activation of naive proteolipid protein (PLP)139-151-specific T cells in SJL mice undergoing PLP178-191-induced R-EAE or TMEV-IDD occurs directly in the CNS and not in the cervical lymph nodes or other peripheral lymphoid organs. Examination of the antigen-presentation capacity of antigen-presenting cell (APC) populations purified from the CNS of mice with PLP178-191-induced R-EAE shows that only F4/80-CD11c+CD45hi dendritic cells (DCs) efficiently present endogenous antigen to activate naive PLP139-151-specific T cells in vitro. In contrast, DCs as well as F4/80+CD45hi macrophages and F4/80+CD45lo microglia activate a PLP139-151-specific helper T cell line. The data suggest that naive T cells enter the inflamed CNS and are activated by local APCs, possibly DCs, to initiate epitope spreading.  相似文献   

18.
Brain inflammation has a critical role in the pathophysiology of brain diseases. Microglia, the resident immune cells in the brain, play an important role in brain inflammation, while brain mast cells are the “first responder” in the injury rather than microglia. Functional aspects of mast cell-microglia interactions remain poorly understood. Our results demonstrated that site-directed injection of the “mast cell degranulator” compound 48/80 (C48/80) in the hypothalamus induced mast cell degranulation, microglial activation, and inflammatory factor production, which initiated the acute brain inflammatory response. “Mast cell stabilizer” disodium cromoglycate (cromolyn) inhibited this effect, including decrease of inflammatory cytokines, reduced microglial activation, inhibition of MAPK and AKT pathways, and repression of protein expression of histamine receptor 1 (H1R), histamine receptor 4 (H4R), protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2), and toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) in microglia. We also demonstrated that C48/80 had no effect on microglial activation in mast cell-deficient KitW-sh/W-sh mice. These results implicate that activated brain mast cells trigger microglial activation and stabilization of mast cell inhibits microglial activation-induced central nervous system (CNS) inflammation. Interactions between mast cells and microglia could constitute a new and unique therapeutic target for CNS immune inflammation-related diseases.  相似文献   

19.
Although its actual role in the progression of degenerative processes is not fully known, the persistent activated state of retinal microglia and the concurrent secretion of inflammatory mediators may contribute to neuronal death and permanent vision loss. Our objective was to determine whether non‐ocular conditions (immunosuppression and peripheral inflammation) could lead to activation of retinal microglia. Mouse models of immunosuppression induced by cyclophosphamide and/or peripheral inflammation by chemically induced sublethal colitis in C57BL/6J mice were used. Retinal microglia morphology, spatial distribution and complexity, as well as MHCII and CD11b expression levels were determined by flow cytometry and confocal immunofluorescence analysis with anti‐CD11b, anti‐IBA1 and anti‐MHCIIRT1B antibodies. Retinas of mice with double treatment showed changes in microglial morphology, spatial distribution and expression levels of CD11b and MHCII. These effects were higher than those observed with any treatment separately. In addition, we also observed in these mice: (i) translocation of endogenous bacteria from gut to liver, and (ii) upregulation of TLR2 expression in retinal microglia. Using a mouse model of immunosuppression and gut colonization by Candida albicans, translocation of fungal cells was confirmed to occur in wild type and, to a higher extent, in TLR2 KO mice, which are more susceptible to fungal invasion; interestingly microglial changes were also higher in TLR2 KO mice. Hence, non‐ocular injuries (immunosuppression, peripheral inflammation and invasive infection from endogenous gut microbiota) can activate retinal microglia and therefore could affect the progression of neurodegenerative disorders and should be taken into account to improve therapeutic options.  相似文献   

20.
Interleukin-17A (IL-17A) is a key cytokine modulating the course of inflammatory diseases. Whereas effector functions of IL-17A like induction of antimicrobial peptides and leukocyte infiltration could clearly be demonstrated for peripheral organs, CNS specific effects are not well defined and appear controversial. To further clarify the functional significance of IL-17A in the CNS, we generated a transgenic mouse line with astrocyte-restricted expression of the IL-17A gene. GFAP/IL-17A transgenic mice develop normally and do not show any signs of neurological dysfunction. However, histological characterization revealed astrocytosis and activation of microglia. Demyelination, neurodegeneration or prominent tissue damage was not observed but a vascular pathology mimicking microangiopathic features was evident. Histological and flow cytometric analysis demonstrated the absence of parenchymal infiltration of immune cells into the CNS of GFAP/IL-17A transgenic mice. In GFAP/IL-17A mice, LPS-induced endotoxemia led to a more pronounced microglial activation with expansion of a distinct CD45high/CD11b+ population and increased induction of proinflammatory cytokines compared with controls. Our data argues against a direct role of IL-17A in mediating tissue damage during neuroinflammation. More likely IL-17A acts as a modulating factor in the network of induced cytokines. This novel mouse model will be a very useful tool to further characterize the role of IL-17A in neuroinflammatory disease models.  相似文献   

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