Herrero María-Trinidad, Estrada Cristina, Maatouk Layal, Vyas Sheela
Clinical and Experimental Neuroscience (NiCE-IMIB), Institute for Bio-Health Research of Murcia, School of Medicine, Campus Mare Nostrum, University of Murcia Murcia, Spain.
Laboratory of Gene Regulation and Adaptive Behaviors, Department of Neuroscience Paris Seine, INSERM U 1130, CNRS UMR 8246, UPMC UM 119, Université Pierre et Marie Curie Paris, France.
Front Neuroanat. 2015 Apr 2;9:32. doi: 10.3389/fnana.2015.00032. eCollection 2015.
Chronic inflammation is a major characteristic feature of Parkinson's disease (PD). Studies in PD patients show evidence of augmented levels of potent pro-inflammatory molecules e.g., TNF-α, iNOS, IL-1β whereas in experimental Parkinsonism it has been consistently demonstrated that dopaminergic neurons are particularly vulnerable to activated glia releasing these toxic factors. Recent genetic studies point to the role of immune system in the etiology of PD, thus in combination with environmental factors, both peripheral and CNS-mediated immune responses could play important roles in onset and progression of PD. Whereas microglia, astrocytes and infiltrating T cells are known to mediate chronic inflammation, the roles of other immune-competent cells are less well understood. Inflammation is a tightly controlled process. One major effector system of regulation is HPA axis. Glucocorticoids (GCs) released from adrenal glands upon stimulation of HPA axis, in response to either cell injury or presence of pathogen, activate their receptor, GR. GR regulates inflammation both through direct transcriptional action on target genes and by indirectly inhibiting transcriptional activities of transcriptional factors such as NF-κB, AP-1 or interferon regulatory factors. In PD patients, the HPA axis is unbalanced and the cortisol levels are significantly increased, implying a deregulation of GR function in immune cells. In experimental Parkinsonism, the activation of microglial GR has a crucial effect in diminishing microglial cell activation and reducing dopaminergic degeneration. Moreover, GCs are also known to regulate human brain vasculature as well as blood brain barrier (BBB) permeability, any dysfunction in their actions may influence infiltration of cytotoxic molecules resulting in increased vulnerability of dopamine neurons in PD. Overall, deregulation of glucocorticoid receptor actions is likely important in dopamine neuron degeneration through establishment of chronic inflammation.
慢性炎症是帕金森病(PD)的一个主要特征。对PD患者的研究表明,强效促炎分子如肿瘤坏死因子-α(TNF-α)、诱导型一氧化氮合酶(iNOS)、白细胞介素-1β(IL-1β)的水平升高,而在实验性帕金森病中,一直有证据表明多巴胺能神经元特别容易受到激活的胶质细胞释放这些毒性因子的影响。最近的遗传学研究指出免疫系统在PD病因学中的作用,因此,结合环境因素,外周和中枢神经系统介导的免疫反应可能在PD的发病和进展中起重要作用。虽然已知小胶质细胞、星形胶质细胞和浸润性T细胞介导慢性炎症,但其他免疫活性细胞的作用尚不太清楚。炎症是一个受到严格控制的过程。一个主要的调节效应系统是下丘脑-垂体-肾上腺(HPA)轴。在HPA轴受到刺激后,肾上腺释放的糖皮质激素(GCs),无论是对细胞损伤还是病原体的存在做出反应,都会激活其受体糖皮质激素受体(GR)。GR通过对靶基因的直接转录作用以及间接抑制转录因子如核因子κB(NF-κB)、激活蛋白-1(AP-1)或干扰素调节因子的转录活性来调节炎症。在PD患者中,HPA轴失衡,皮质醇水平显著升高,这意味着免疫细胞中GR功能失调。在实验性帕金森病中,小胶质细胞GR的激活对减少小胶质细胞激活和减少多巴胺能神经元变性具有关键作用。此外,已知GCs还调节人脑血管系统以及血脑屏障(BBB)的通透性,其作用的任何功能障碍都可能影响细胞毒性分子的浸润,导致PD中多巴胺神经元的易损性增加。总体而言,糖皮质激素受体作用失调可能通过建立慢性炎症在多巴胺神经元变性中起重要作用。