Aharoni Rina, Arnon Ruth, Eilam Raya
Department of Immunology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, 76100, Israel.
J Neurosci. 2005 Sep 7;25(36):8217-28. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1859-05.2005.
Brain insults such as the autoimmune inflammatory process in multiple sclerosis (MS) and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) induce a measure of neurogenesis, but its regenerative therapeutic consequence is limited, because it fails to regenerate functional neurons and compensate the damage. Here, we investigated whether peripheral immunomodulatory treatment for MS/EAE, glatiramer acetate (GA), can enhance neurogenesis and generate neuroprotection in the CNS of EAE-inflicted mice. EAE was induced by myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein peptide, either in yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) 2.2 transgenic mice, which selectively express YFP on their neuronal population, or in C57BL/6 mice. The in situ effect of GA was studied in various brain regions; neuroprotection and neurogeneration were evaluated and quantified by measuring the expression of different neuronal antigens and in vivo proliferation markers. The results demonstrated that in EAE-inflicted mice, neuroproliferation was initially elevated after disease appearance but subsequently declined below that of naive mice. In contrast, GA treatment in various stages of the disease led to sustained reduction in the neuronal/axonal damage typical to the neurodegenerative disease course. Moreover, three processes characteristic of neurogenesis, namely cell proliferation, migration, and differentiation, were augmented and extended by GA treatment in EAE mice compared with EAE-untreated mice and naive controls. The newborn neuroprogenitors manifested massive migration through exciting and dormant migration pathways, into injury sites in brain regions, which do not normally undergo neurogenesis, and differentiated to mature neuronal phenotype. This suggests a direct linkage between immunomodulation, neurogenesis, and an in situ therapeutic consequence in the CNS.
脑部损伤,如多发性硬化症(MS)和实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE)中的自身免疫性炎症过程,会引发一定程度的神经发生,但其再生治疗效果有限,因为它无法再生功能性神经元并补偿损伤。在此,我们研究了针对MS/EAE的外周免疫调节治疗药物醋酸格拉替雷(GA)是否能增强EAE诱导小鼠中枢神经系统中的神经发生并产生神经保护作用。通过髓鞘少突胶质细胞糖蛋白肽诱导EAE,诱导对象为黄色荧光蛋白(YFP)2.2转基因小鼠(其神经元群体选择性表达YFP)或C57BL/6小鼠。在不同脑区研究了GA的原位效应;通过测量不同神经元抗原的表达和体内增殖标志物来评估和量化神经保护和神经发生情况。结果表明,在EAE诱导的小鼠中,神经增殖在疾病出现后最初升高,但随后降至低于未患病小鼠的水平。相比之下,在疾病的各个阶段进行GA治疗可使神经退行性疾病病程中典型的神经元/轴突损伤持续减少。此外,与未接受GA治疗的EAE小鼠和未患病对照相比,GA治疗可增强和延长EAE小鼠中神经发生的三个特征性过程,即细胞增殖、迁移和分化。新生神经祖细胞通过活跃和静止的迁移途径大量迁移到通常不会发生神经发生的脑区损伤部位,并分化为成熟的神经元表型。这表明免疫调节、神经发生与中枢神经系统原位治疗效果之间存在直接联系。