Schwartz M, London A, Shechter R
Department of Neurobiology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Herzl Street, Rehovot, Israel, 76100.
Neuroscience. 2009 Feb 6;158(3):1133-42. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2008.12.013. Epub 2008 Dec 14.
Our research group has been working for more than a decade on the cross-talk between the immune and the nervous systems. Due to the unique nature of the central nervous system (CNS) as an immune privileged site, it was commonly believed that the nervous system functions optimally without any immune intervention, and that any immune cell infiltration to the CNS is a sign of pathology. However, since the immune system constitutes the body's major defense and repair mechanism, it seemed unreasonable that the CNS would have completely lost the need for assistance from this system. This insight prompted us to revisit the entire question of whether immune cells are required for recovery from CNS injuries. We subsequently made numerous fundamental observations that led us to formulate a unified theory linking all neurodegenerative conditions; thus, we suggested that "T-cell immunity to self maintains the self," at least in the CNS. According to this view, immunity to self ("protective autoimmunity") provides a pivotal role in maintenance, protection, and repair of the healthy and diseased CNS. We further showed that the T cells mediate their effect, at least under pathological conditions, by controlling the recruitment of blood-borne monocytes, which play a crucial local role that cannot be replaced by the resident microglia. Boosting of such a T cell response specific for brain proteins, while carefully choosing the antigen, the carrier, timing, dosing, and regimen should be considered as a way of augmenting a physiological repair mechanism needed to ameliorate disease conditions while restoring equilibrium needed for protection, repair and renewal; such therapy is not intended to modify a single mediator of a single disease, but rather, would serve as an approach for adjusting the levels of the immune response needed to restore a lost balance.
我们的研究团队在免疫系统与神经系统之间的相互作用方面已经开展了十多年的研究。由于中枢神经系统(CNS)作为免疫特权部位的独特性质,人们普遍认为神经系统在没有任何免疫干预的情况下能最佳地发挥功能,并且任何免疫细胞浸润到中枢神经系统都是病理状态的标志。然而,鉴于免疫系统构成了身体的主要防御和修复机制,中枢神经系统完全不需要该系统的协助似乎不太合理。这一见解促使我们重新审视免疫细胞对于中枢神经系统损伤恢复是否必需这一整个问题。随后我们进行了大量基础性观察,这些观察使我们形成了一个将所有神经退行性疾病联系起来的统一理论;因此,我们提出“对自身的T细胞免疫维持自身”,至少在中枢神经系统中是这样。根据这一观点,对自身的免疫(“保护性自身免疫”)在健康和患病的中枢神经系统的维持、保护及修复中发挥着关键作用。我们进一步表明,T细胞至少在病理条件下通过控制血源性单核细胞的募集来介导其作用,而血源性单核细胞发挥着关键的局部作用,这种作用无法由常驻小胶质细胞替代。在仔细选择抗原、载体、时机、剂量和方案的同时,增强针对脑蛋白的这种T细胞反应应被视为一种增强生理修复机制的方法,这种生理修复机制是改善疾病状况同时恢复保护、修复和更新所需平衡所必需的;这种疗法并非旨在改变单一疾病的单一介质,而是将作为一种调整免疫反应水平的方法,以恢复失去的平衡。