Skaper Stephen D, Facci Laura, Zusso Morena, Giusti Pietro
Department of Pharmaceutical and Pharmacological Sciences, University of Padua, Padua, Italy.
Front Cell Neurosci. 2018 Mar 21;12:72. doi: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00072. eCollection 2018.
Inflammation is a complex biological response fundamental to how the body deals with injury and infection to eliminate the initial cause of cell injury and effect repair. Unlike a normally beneficial acute inflammatory response, chronic inflammation can lead to tissue damage and ultimately its destruction, and often results from an inappropriate immune response. Inflammation in the nervous system ("neuroinflammation"), especially when prolonged, can be particularly injurious. While inflammation may not cause disease, it contributes importantly to disease pathogenesis across both the peripheral (neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia) and central [e.g., Alzheimer disease, Parkinson disease, multiple sclerosis, motor neuron disease, ischemia and traumatic brain injury, depression, and autism spectrum disorder] nervous systems. The existence of extensive lines of communication between the nervous system and immune system represents a fundamental principle underlying neuroinflammation. Immune cell-derived inflammatory molecules are critical for regulation of host responses to inflammation. Although these mediators can originate from various non-neuronal cells, important sources in the above neuropathologies appear to be microglia and mast cells, together with astrocytes and possibly also oligodendrocytes. Understanding neuroinflammation also requires an appreciation that non-neuronal cell-cell interactions, between both glia and mast cells and glia themselves, are an integral part of the inflammation process. Within this context the mast cell occupies a key niche in orchestrating the inflammatory process, from initiation to prolongation. This review will describe the current state of knowledge concerning the biology of neuroinflammation, emphasizing mast cell-glia and glia-glia interactions, then conclude with a consideration of how a cell's endogenous mechanisms might be leveraged to provide a therapeutic strategy to target neuroinflammation.
炎症是一种复杂的生物学反应,对于身体应对损伤和感染以消除细胞损伤的初始原因并实现修复至关重要。与通常有益的急性炎症反应不同,慢性炎症会导致组织损伤并最终导致其破坏,并且通常源于不适当的免疫反应。神经系统中的炎症(“神经炎症”),尤其是长期存在时,可能特别有害。虽然炎症本身可能不会引发疾病,但它在周围神经系统(神经性疼痛、纤维肌痛)和中枢神经系统[例如,阿尔茨海默病、帕金森病、多发性硬化症、运动神经元病、缺血性和创伤性脑损伤、抑郁症以及自闭症谱系障碍]的疾病发病机制中都起着重要作用。神经系统和免疫系统之间存在广泛的通信线路,这是神经炎症的一个基本原理。免疫细胞衍生的炎症分子对于调节宿主对炎症的反应至关重要。尽管这些介质可以源自各种非神经元细胞,但上述神经病理学中的重要来源似乎是小胶质细胞和肥大细胞,以及星形胶质细胞,也可能还有少突胶质细胞。理解神经炎症还需要认识到,神经胶质细胞与肥大细胞之间以及神经胶质细胞自身之间的非神经元细胞间相互作用是炎症过程的一个组成部分。在这种情况下,肥大细胞在协调从炎症起始到延长的整个炎症过程中占据关键位置。本综述将描述关于神经炎症生物学的当前知识状态,重点强调肥大细胞与神经胶质细胞以及神经胶质细胞之间的相互作用,然后以考虑如何利用细胞的内源性机制来提供针对神经炎症的治疗策略作为结论。