Wohleb Eric S
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Front Immunol. 2016 Nov 29;7:544. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00544. eCollection 2016.
Persistent cognitive and behavioral symptoms that characterize many mental health disorders arise from impaired neuroplasticity in several key corticolimbic brain regions. Recent evidence suggests that reciprocal neuron-microglia interactions shape neuroplasticity during physiological conditions, implicating microglia in the neurobiology of mental health disorders. Neuron-microglia interactions are modulated by several molecular and cellular pathways, and dysregulation of these pathways often have neurobiological consequences, including aberrant neuronal responses and microglia activation. Impaired neuron-microglia interactions are implicated in mental health disorders because rodent stress models lead to concomitant neuronal dystrophy and alterations in microglia morphology and function. In this context, functional changes in microglia may be indicative of an immune state termed parainflammation in which tissue-resident macrophages (i.e., microglia) respond to malfunctioning cells by initiating modest inflammation in an attempt to restore homeostasis. Thus, aberrant neuronal activity and release of damage-associated signals during repeated stress exposure may contribute to functional changes in microglia and resultant parainflammation. Furthermore, accumulating evidence shows that uncoupling neuron-microglia interactions may contribute to altered neuroplasticity and associated anxiety- or depressive-like behaviors. Additional work shows that microglia have varied phenotypes in specific brain regions, which may underlie divergent neuroplasticity observed in corticolimbic structures following stress exposure. These findings indicate that neuron-microglia interactions are critical mediators of the interface between adaptive, homeostatic neuronal function and the neurobiology of mental health disorders.
许多精神健康障碍所特有的持续性认知和行为症状源于几个关键的皮质边缘脑区神经可塑性受损。最近的证据表明,在生理条件下,神经元与小胶质细胞之间的相互作用塑造了神经可塑性,这表明小胶质细胞与精神健康障碍的神经生物学有关。神经元与小胶质细胞之间的相互作用受多种分子和细胞途径调节,这些途径的失调通常会产生神经生物学后果,包括异常的神经元反应和小胶质细胞激活。神经元与小胶质细胞之间的相互作用受损与精神健康障碍有关,因为啮齿动物应激模型会导致神经元营养不良以及小胶质细胞形态和功能的改变。在这种情况下,小胶质细胞的功能变化可能表明一种称为副炎症的免疫状态,即组织驻留巨噬细胞(即小胶质细胞)通过引发适度炎症来应对功能失常的细胞,试图恢复体内平衡。因此,在反复应激暴露期间异常的神经元活动和损伤相关信号的释放可能导致小胶质细胞的功能变化以及由此产生的副炎症。此外,越来越多的证据表明,神经元与小胶质细胞之间的相互作用解偶联可能导致神经可塑性改变以及相关的焦虑样或抑郁样行为。更多研究表明,小胶质细胞在特定脑区具有不同的表型,这可能是应激暴露后皮质边缘结构中观察到的不同神经可塑性的基础。这些发现表明,神经元与小胶质细胞之间的相互作用是适应性、稳态神经元功能与精神健康障碍神经生物学之间界面的关键介质。