Neurobiology of disease
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Neurobiology of disease · Dec 2019
RANTES-induced invasion of Th17 cells into substantia nigra potentiates dopaminergic cell loss in MPTP mouse model of Parkinson's disease.
Although Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease, the disease does not progress or persist in 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) mouse model, the most common animal model of PD. Recently, we have described that supplementation of regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES), a chemokine known to drive infiltration of T cells, induces persistent nigrostriatal pathology in MPTP mouse model. However, which particular T cell subsets are recruited to the substantia nigra (SN) by RANTES is not known. ⋯ RANTES-mediated aggravation of nigral TH neurons also paralleled with significant DA loss in striatum and locomotor deficits in MPTP-intoxicated Rag1-/- mice receiving Th17 cells. Finally, we demonstrate that levels of IL-17 (a Th17-specific cytokine) and RANTES are higher in serum of PD patients than age-matched controls and that RANTES positively correlated with IL-17 in serum of PD patients. Together, these results highlight the importance of RANTES-Th17 pathway in progressive dopaminergic neuronal loss and associated PD pathology.
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Neurobiology of disease · Dec 2019
Periodic dietary restriction ameliorates amyloid pathology and cognitive impairment in PDAPP-J20 mice: Potential implication of glial autophagy.
Dietary restriction promotes cell regeneration and stress resistance in multiple models of human diseases. One of the conditions that could potentially benefit from this strategy is Alzheimer's disease, a chronic, progressive and prevalent neurodegenerative disease. Although there are no effective pharmacological treatments for this pathology, lifestyle interventions could play therapeutic roles. ⋯ In vitro experiments showed that nutrient restriction decreased astroglial and, indirectly, microglial NFκB activation in response to amyloid β peptides. Furthermore, nutrient restriction was able to preserve astroglial autophagic flux and to decrease intracellular amyloid after exposure to amyloid β peptides. Our results suggest neuroprotective effects of nutrient restriction in Alzheimer's disease, with modulation of glial activation and autophagy being potentially involved pathways.