Busch Sarah A, Horn Kevin P, Silver Daniel J, Silver Jerry
Department of Neurosciences, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
J Neurosci. 2009 Aug 12;29(32):9967-76. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1151-09.2009.
Trauma to the adult CNS initiates multiple processes including primary and secondary axotomy, inflammation, and glial scar formation that have devastating effects on neuronal regeneration. After spinal cord injury, the infiltration of phagocytic macrophages coincides with long-distance axonal retraction from the initial site of injury, a deleterious phenomenon known as axonal dieback. We have previously shown that activated macrophages directly induce long-distance retraction of dystrophic axons in an in vitro model of the glial scar. We hypothesized that treatments that are primarily thought to increase neuronal regeneration following spinal cord injury may in fact derive a portion of their beneficial effects from inhibition of macrophage-mediated axonal retraction. We analyzed the effects of protease inhibition, substrate modification, and neuronal preconditioning on macrophage-axon interactions using our established in vitro model. General inhibition of matrix metalloproteinases and specific inhibition of MMP-9 prevented macrophage-induced axonal retraction despite significant physical interactions between the two cell types, whereas inhibition of MMP-2 had no effect. Chondroitinase ABC-mediated digestion of the aggrecan substrate also prevented macrophage-induced axonal retraction in the presence of extensive macrophage-axon interactions. The use of a conditioning lesion to stimulate intrinsic neuronal growth potential in the absence of substrate modification likewise prevented macrophage-induced axonal retraction in vitro and in vivo following spinal cord injury. These data provide valuable insight into the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying macrophage-mediated axonal retraction and demonstrate modifications that can alleviate the detrimental effects of this unfavorable phenomenon on the postlesion CNS.
成人中枢神经系统创伤会引发多种过程,包括原发性和继发性轴突切断、炎症以及胶质瘢痕形成,这些对神经元再生具有毁灭性影响。脊髓损伤后,吞噬性巨噬细胞的浸润与轴突从损伤初始部位的远距离回缩同时发生,这是一种被称为轴突回缩的有害现象。我们之前已经表明,在胶质瘢痕的体外模型中,活化的巨噬细胞直接诱导营养不良轴突的远距离回缩。我们推测,那些主要被认为可促进脊髓损伤后神经元再生的治疗方法,实际上可能部分得益于对巨噬细胞介导的轴突回缩的抑制。我们使用已建立的体外模型分析了蛋白酶抑制、底物修饰和神经元预处理对巨噬细胞与轴突相互作用的影响。基质金属蛋白酶的全面抑制以及MMP - 9的特异性抑制可防止巨噬细胞诱导的轴突回缩,尽管两种细胞类型之间存在显著的物理相互作用,而抑制MMP - 2则没有效果。软骨素酶ABC介导的聚集蛋白聚糖底物消化在存在广泛的巨噬细胞 - 轴突相互作用的情况下也可防止巨噬细胞诱导的轴突回缩。在不存在底物修饰的情况下,使用预处理损伤来刺激内在神经元生长潜力同样可在脊髓损伤后的体外和体内防止巨噬细胞诱导的轴突回缩。这些数据为巨噬细胞介导的轴突回缩背后的细胞和分子机制提供了有价值的见解,并证明了可以减轻这种不利现象对损伤后中枢神经系统有害影响的修饰方法。