Journal of neuroscience research
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Comparative Study
Blockade of interleukin-6 receptor suppresses reactive astrogliosis and ameliorates functional recovery in experimental spinal cord injury.
Endogenous neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) have recently been shown to differentiate exclusively into astrocytes, the cells that are involved in glial scar formation after spinal cord injury (SCI). The microenvironment of the spinal cord, especially the inflammatory cytokines that dramatically increase in the acute phase at the injury site, is considered to be an important cause of inhibitory mechanism of neuronal differentiation following SCI. Interleukin-6 (IL-6), which has been demonstrated to induce NSPCs to undergo astrocytic differentiation selectively through the JAK/STAT pathway in vitro, has also been demonstrated to play a critical role as a proinflammatory cytokine and to be associated with secondary tissue damage in SCI. ⋯ MR16-1 also decreased the number of invading inflammatory cells and the severity of connective tissue scar formation. In addition, we observed significant functional recovery in the mice treated with MR16-1 compared with control mice. These findings suggest that neutralization of IL-6 signaling in the acute phase of SCI represents an attractive option for the treatment of SCI.
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Progressive "dying back" neurodegenerative diseases are debilitating due to loss of connectivity after nerve terminal and axonal withdrawal, which impairs peripheral nerve function and leads ultimately to neuronal cell death. The mutant mouse (Wallerian degeneration slow; Wld(s)) provides an accessible model system to understand orthograde and retrograde degeneration, because in these mice axotomy induces slow, progressive withdrawal of nerve terminals from motor endplates. Axon degeneration itself is about 10 times slower than in wild-type mice. ⋯ Organ cultures of neonatal Wld(s) muscle maintained for 1-2 days in vitro also showed no evidence of synaptic terminal degeneration, but elimination of polyneuronal innervation progressed in vitro at approximately the same rate as in vivo. Taken together, the data suggest that both natural and axotomy-induced forms of synapse withdrawal may be accessible to continuous observation and analysis, in organ-cultures of Wld(S) mouse muscles. This offers several advantages over repeated visualization of synaptic remodeling that has thus far been possible only in vivo.
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Comparative Study
Binding and transport of [3H](2S,4R)- 4-methylglutamate, a new ligand for glutamate transporters, demonstrate labeling of EAAT1 in cultured murine astrocytes.
Transporters for L-glutamate (excitatory amino acid transporters; EAATs), localized to astrocytes, are involved intimately in intermediary metabolism within the brain. Because (2S,4R)-4-methylglutamate (4MG) has affinity for glial EAATs, we employed [(3)H]4MG to define the characteristics of EAATs in cultured murine astrocytes and describe new approaches to analyze EAAT function. Specific binding of [(3)H]4MG in astrocytic membranes at 4 degrees C represented 90% of total binding. ⋯ Studies with [(3)H]D-Asp reinforced evidence that [(3)H]4MG was binding to EAATs. These data were consistent with Western blot analyses, which indicated abundant expression of EAAT1 but not EAAT2. [(3)H]4MG was also accumulated rapidly (apparent t(1/2) approximately 4 min) into whole astrocytes by a sodium- and temperature-sensitive process (K(m) of 146 +/- 24 microM, V(max) = 336 +/- 27 nmol/mg protein/min), which possessed an EAAT1-like pharmacologic profile. These findings confirm that 4MG is a substrate for EAAT1 and that the binding assay developed using [(3)H]4MG can be utilized in various preparations including cultured astrocytes.
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Comparative Study
Acute transplantation of olfactory ensheathing cells or Schwann cells promotes recovery after spinal cord injury in the rat.
We compared the neurological and electrophysiological outcome, glial reactivity, and spared spinal cord connectivity promoted by acute transplantation of olfactory ensheathing cells (group OEC) or Schwann cells (group SC) after a mild injury to the rat spinal cord. Animals were subjected to a photochemical injury of 2.5 min irradiation at the T8 spinal cord segment. After lesion, a suspension containing 180,000 OECs or SCs was injected. ⋯ OEC-transplanted animals had reduced astrocytic reactivity and proteoglycan expression in comparison with SC-transplanted and DM rats. Taken together, these results indicate that transplantation of both OEC and SC has potential for restoration of injured spinal cords. OEC grafts showed superior ability to reduce glial reactivity and to improve functional recovery.
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Comparative Study
The chemokine receptor CXCR4 and not the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor mediates gp120 neurotoxicity in cerebellar granule cells.
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) glycoprotein gp120 causes neuronal cell death; however, the molecular mechanisms of the neurotoxic effect remain largely unresolved. It has been suggested that gp120 evokes cell death by inducing the release of neurotoxins, including glutamate. The objective of this work was to examine the role of glutamate in gp120-mediated neurotoxicity. ⋯ This compound prevented gp120- but not glutamate-mediated cell death. These findings suggest that gp120 is toxic to neurons even in the absence of the virus and that the toxic mechanism involves primarily activation of CXCR4 receptor. Therefore, antagonists to the CXCR4 receptor may be more suitable compounds for inhibiting HIV-1 neurotoxicity.