Literature DB >> 12946661

CD4+ T, but not CD8+ or B, lymphocytes mediate facial motoneuron survival after facial nerve transection.

Craig J Serpe1, Susanna Coers, Virginia M Sanders, Kathryn J Jones.   

Abstract

The capacity of facial motor neurons (FMN) to survive injury and successfully regenerate is substantially compromised in immunodeficient mice, which lack T and B lymphocytes (). The goal of the present study was to determine which T cell subset (CD4+ and/or CD8+), and whether the B lymphocyte, is involved in FMN survival after nerve injury. All mice were subjected to a right facial nerve axotomy, with the left (uncut) side serving as an internal control. FMN survival, of the right (cut) side, was measured 4 weeks post-operative, and expressed as a percentage of the left (uncut) control side. FMN survival in wild-type mice was 86%+/-1.5. In contrast, FMN survival in CD4 KO mice was 60%+/-2.0. Reconstitution of either CD4 KO mice, or recombinase activating gene-2 knockout (RAG-2 KO) mice (which lack functional T and B cells) with CD4+ T cells alone restored FMN survival to wild-type levels (85%+/-1.2 and 84%+/-2.5, respectively). There was no difference in FMN survival between wild-type, CD8 KO and MmuMT (B cell deficient) mice. Reconstitution of RAG-2 KO mice with CD8+ T cells alone, or B cells alone, failed to restore FMN survival levels (65%+/-1.5 and 63%+/-1.0, respectively). It is concluded that, of the population of FMN that do not survive injury, CD4+ T lymphocytes, but not CD8+ T lymphocytes or B cells, mediate FMN survival after peripheral nerve injury.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12946661     DOI: 10.1016/s0889-1591(03)00028-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Behav Immun        ISSN: 0889-1591            Impact factor:   7.217


  49 in total

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Authors:  Grace K Ha; Zhi Huang; John M Petitto
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Review 5.  Brain behavior and immunity: twenty years of T cells.

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Review 6.  Mechanisms and implications of adaptive immune responses after traumatic spinal cord injury.

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8.  CD4+ T cells support glial neuroprotection, slow disease progression, and modify glial morphology in an animal model of inherited ALS.

Authors:  David R Beers; Jenny S Henkel; Weihua Zhao; Jinghong Wang; Stanley H Appel
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9.  Immunodeficiency impairs re-injury induced reversal of neuronal atrophy: relation to T cell subsets and microglia.

Authors:  Grace K Ha; Zhi Huang; Ravi Parikh; Marlon Pastrana; John M Petitto
Journal:  Exp Neurol       Date:  2007-08-01       Impact factor: 5.330

10.  Exacerbation of facial motoneuron loss after facial nerve axotomy in CCR3-deficient mice.

Authors:  Derek A Wainwright; Junping Xin; Nichole A Mesnard; Taylor R Beahrs; Christine M Politis; Virginia M Sanders; Kathryn J Jones
Journal:  ASN Neuro       Date:  2009-12-11       Impact factor: 4.146

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