Wang J, Asensio V C, Campbell I L
Department of Neuropharmacology, SP315, Scripps Research Institute, 10550 N. Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol. 2002;265:23-48. doi: 10.1007/978-3-662-09525-6_2.
Cytokines and chemokines are potent biologic response molecules that play a key role in cellular communication in physiologic and pathophysiologic states. An understanding of the actions and roles of these molecules in CNS biology has been greatly facilitated by molecular genetic approaches that permit the targeted manipulation of gene expression in an intact organism. Studies in promoter-driven transgenic mice with CNS production of a number of cytokines or chemokines have demonstrated that these factors can directly induce a spectrum of cellular alterations often resulting in pronounced neurological disease (Table 1). Thus, these factors, in addition to initiating and maintaining immunoinflammatory responses, can be direct mediators of CNS injury. The neuropathological outcomes in the transgenic mice often recapitulate those reported in human neurological disorders such as MS, neurological diseases associated with AIDS and Alzheimer's disease, pointing to the importance of these animal models to our understanding of the role of cytokines and chemokines in these human disorders. Despite problems of timing and tissue specificity as well as some inconsistencies in the findings from different groups, knockout mice have begun to provide insights that are altering our view of the contribution made by individual cytokines to immunoinflammatory responses in the brain. For example, IL-6 and TNF were originally viewed as having minor and major proinflammatory contributions, respectively, in EAE, but now, based on findings from knockout mice, the opposite seems true. Studies in transgenic and knockout mice now offer strong evidence that, in addition to being mediators of damage, cytokines can have beneficial functions, e.g. the antiviral functions of the IFNs or the trophic and/or neuroprotective actions of some cytokines such as IL-6 and TNF. Clearly, studies in mutant mice, as summarized here, will continue to provide important insights into the nature of cytokine and chemokine actions in the CNS and will offer the possibility that we may identify new targets for effective therapeutic intervention in neuroinflammatory disorders.
细胞因子和趋化因子是强大的生物反应分子,在生理和病理生理状态下的细胞通讯中发挥关键作用。分子遗传学方法允许在完整生物体中对基因表达进行靶向操作,极大地促进了我们对这些分子在中枢神经系统生物学中的作用和功能的理解。对启动子驱动的转基因小鼠进行研究,使其中枢神经系统产生多种细胞因子或趋化因子,结果表明这些因子可直接诱导一系列细胞改变,常常导致明显的神经疾病(表1)。因此,这些因子除了启动和维持免疫炎症反应外,还可成为中枢神经系统损伤的直接介质。转基因小鼠的神经病理学结果常常重现人类神经疾病(如多发性硬化症、与艾滋病相关的神经疾病和阿尔茨海默病)中所报道的情况,这表明这些动物模型对于我们理解细胞因子和趋化因子在这些人类疾病中的作用具有重要意义。尽管存在时间和组织特异性问题以及不同研究小组的研究结果存在一些不一致之处,但基因敲除小鼠已开始提供一些见解,这些见解正在改变我们对单个细胞因子在脑内免疫炎症反应中所起作用的看法。例如,白细胞介素-6和肿瘤坏死因子最初在实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎中分别被认为具有较小和较大的促炎作用,但现在根据基因敲除小鼠的研究结果,情况似乎正好相反。对转基因和基因敲除小鼠的研究现在提供了有力证据,表明细胞因子除了作为损伤介质外,还可具有有益功能,例如干扰素的抗病毒功能或某些细胞因子(如白细胞介素-6和肿瘤坏死因子)的营养和/或神经保护作用。显然,如本文所总结的,对突变小鼠的研究将继续为细胞因子和趋化因子在中枢神经系统中的作用性质提供重要见解,并有可能使我们确定针对神经炎症性疾病进行有效治疗干预的新靶点。