Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, The University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, USA.
Exp Biol Med (Maywood). 2023 May;248(9):811-819. doi: 10.1177/15353702231179926. Epub 2023 Jul 29.
The cyclooxygenase (COX)/prostaglandin E2 (PGE) signaling pathway has emerged as a critical target for anti-inflammatory therapeutic development in neurological diseases. However, medical use of COX inhibitors in the treatment of various neurological disorders has been limited due to well-documented cardiovascular and cerebrovascular complications. It has been widely proposed that modulation of downstream microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 (mPGES-1) enzyme may provide more specificity for inhibiting PGE-elicited neuroinflammation. Heightened levels of mPGES-1 have been detected in a variety of brain diseases such as epilepsy, stroke, glioma, and neurodegenerative diseases. Subsequently, elevated levels of PGE, the enzymatic product of mPGES-1, have been demonstrated to modulate a multitude of deleterious effects. In epilepsy, PGE participates in retrograde signaling to augment glutamate release at the synapse leading to neuronal death. The excitotoxic demise of neurons incites the activation of microglia, which can become overactive upon further stimulation by PGE. A selective mPGES-1 inhibitor was able to reduce gliosis and the expression of proinflammatory cytokines in the hippocampus following status epilepticus. A similar mechanism has also been observed in stroke, where the overactivation of microglia by PGE upregulated the expression and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines. This intense activation of neuroinflammatory processes triggered the secondary injury commonly observed in stroke, and blockade of mPGES-1 reduced infarction size and edema, suppressed induction of proinflammatory cytokines, and improved post-stroke well-being and cognition. Furthermore, elevated levels of PGE have been shown to intensify the proliferation of glioma cells, mediate P-glycoprotein expression at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and facilitate breakdown of the BBB. For these reasons, targeting mPGES-1, the central and inducible enzyme of the COX cascade, may provide a more specific therapeutic strategy for treating neuroinflammatory diseases.
环氧化酶(COX)/前列腺素 E2(PGE)信号通路已成为神经疾病抗炎治疗开发的关键靶点。然而,由于有充分记录的心血管和脑血管并发症,COX 抑制剂在各种神经疾病治疗中的医学应用受到限制。广泛认为,调节下游微粒体前列腺素 E 合酶-1(mPGES-1)酶可能为抑制 PGE 引发的神经炎症提供更高的特异性。在各种脑部疾病(如癫痫、中风、神经胶质瘤和神经退行性疾病)中都检测到 mPGES-1 的水平升高。随后,mPGES-1 的酶产物 PGE 的水平升高已被证明可以调节多种有害作用。在癫痫中,PGE 参与逆行信号传导,增强突触处谷氨酸的释放,导致神经元死亡。神经元的兴奋性死亡引发小胶质细胞的激活,而 PGE 的进一步刺激可使小胶质细胞过度活跃。选择性 mPGES-1 抑制剂可减少癫痫持续状态后海马中的神经胶质增生和促炎细胞因子的表达。在中风中也观察到类似的机制,其中 PGE 对小胶质细胞的过度激活上调了促炎细胞因子的表达和分泌。这种强烈的神经炎症过程的激活引发了中风中常见的继发性损伤,而 mPGES-1 的阻断减少了梗死面积和水肿,抑制了促炎细胞因子的诱导,并改善了中风后的生存和认知。此外,已经表明 PGE 水平升高会加剧神经胶质瘤细胞的增殖,调节血脑屏障(BBB)处的 P-糖蛋白表达,并促进 BBB 的破坏。出于这些原因,靶向 COX 级联中的中枢和诱导型酶 mPGES-1 可能为治疗神经炎症性疾病提供更特异的治疗策略。