Laboratorio de Neuroinmunología, Fundación Ciencia and Vida, Ñuñoa, Santiago, Chile.
Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas, Facultad de Ciencias de la Vida, Universidad Andres Bello, Santiago, Chile.
Front Immunol. 2019 Feb 15;10:239. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.00239. eCollection 2019.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder affecting mainly the dopaminergic neurons of the nigrostriatal pathway, a neuronal circuit involved in the control of movements, thereby the main manifestations correspond to motor impairments. The major molecular hallmark of this disease corresponds to the presence of pathological protein inclusions called Lewy bodies in the midbrain of patients, which have been extensively associated with neurotoxic effects. Importantly, different research groups have demonstrated that CD4 T-cells infiltrate into the substantia nigra of PD patients and animal models. Moreover, several studies have consistently demonstrated that T-cell deficiency results in a strong attenuation of dopaminergic neurodegeneration in animal models of PD, thus indicating a key role of adaptive immunity in the neurodegenerative process. Recent evidence has shown that CD4 T-cell response involved in PD patients is directed to oxidised forms of α-synuclein, one of the main constituents of Lewy bodies. On the other hand, most PD patients present a number of non-motor manifestations. Among non-motor manifestations, gastrointestinal dysfunctions result especially important as potential early biomarkers of PD, since they are ubiquitously found among confirmed patients and occur much earlier than motor symptoms. These gastrointestinal dysfunctions include constipation and inflammation of the gut mucosa and the most distinctive pathologic features associated are the loss of neurons of the enteric nervous system and the generation of Lewy bodies in the gut. Moreover, emerging evidence has recently shown a pivotal role of gut microbiota in triggering the development of PD in genetically predisposed individuals. Of note, PD has been positively correlated with inflammatory bowel diseases, a group of disorders involving a T-cell driven inflammation of gut mucosa, which is strongly dependent in the composition of gut microbiota. Here we raised the hypothesis that T-cell driven inflammation, which mediates dopaminergic neurodegeneration in PD, is triggered in the gut mucosa. Accordingly, we discuss how structural components of commensal bacteria or how different mediators produced by gut-microbiota, including short-chain fatty acids and dopamine, may affect the behaviour of T-cells, triggering the development of T-cell responses against Lewy bodies, initially confined to the gut mucosa but later extended to the brain.
帕金森病(PD)是一种主要影响黑质纹状体通路多巴胺能神经元的神经退行性疾病,该神经元回路参与运动的控制,因此主要表现为运动障碍。这种疾病的主要分子特征是病理性蛋白包涵体,称为路易体,存在于患者的中脑中,这些包涵体与神经毒性作用广泛相关。重要的是,不同的研究小组已经证明,CD4 T 细胞浸润到 PD 患者和动物模型的黑质中。此外,几项研究一致表明,T 细胞缺乏会导致 PD 动物模型中多巴胺能神经退行性变的强烈衰减,从而表明适应性免疫在神经退行性过程中起着关键作用。最近的证据表明,涉及 PD 患者的 CD4 T 细胞反应是针对α-突触核蛋白的氧化形式,α-突触核蛋白是路易体的主要成分之一。另一方面,大多数 PD 患者表现出多种非运动症状。在非运动症状中,胃肠道功能障碍尤为重要,因为它们是 PD 患者的潜在早期生物标志物,因为它们在确诊患者中普遍存在,而且比运动症状出现得早得多。这些胃肠道功能障碍包括便秘和肠道黏膜炎症,与这些功能障碍相关的最显著病理特征是肠神经系统神经元的丧失和肠道中路易体的产生。此外,最近的新证据表明,肠道微生物群在触发遗传易感性个体中 PD 的发展方面起着关键作用。值得注意的是,PD 与炎症性肠病呈正相关,炎症性肠病是一组涉及肠道黏膜 T 细胞驱动炎症的疾病,强烈依赖于肠道微生物群的组成。在这里,我们提出了一个假设,即介导 PD 中多巴胺能神经退行性变的 T 细胞驱动炎症是在肠道黏膜中引发的。因此,我们讨论了共生细菌的结构成分或肠道微生物群产生的不同介质(包括短链脂肪酸和多巴胺)如何影响 T 细胞的行为,从而触发针对路易体的 T 细胞反应的发展,这些反应最初局限于肠道黏膜,但后来扩展到大脑。