| Literature DB >> 15285805 |
Marion S Buckwalter1, Tony Wyss-Coray.
Abstract
Inflammation of the central nervous system is an important but poorly understood part of neurological disease. After acute brain injury or infection there is a complex inflammatory response that involves activation of microglia and astrocytes and increased production of cytokines, chemokines, acute phase proteins, and complement factors. Antibodies and T lymphocytes may be involved in the response as well. In neurodegenerative disease, where injury is more subtle but consistent, the inflammatory response is continuous. The purpose of this prolonged response is unclear, but it is likely that some of its components are beneficial and others are harmful. Animal models of neurological disease can be used to dissect the specific role of individual mediators of the inflammatory response and assess their potential benefit. To illustrate this approach, we discuss how mutant mice expressing different levels of the cytokine transforming growth factor beta-1 (TGF-beta1), a major modulator of inflammation, produce important neuroinflammatory phenotypes. We then demonstrate how crosses of TGF-beta1 mutant mice with mouse models of Alzheimer's disease (AD) produced important new information on the role of inflammation in AD and on the expression of different neuropathological phenotypes that characterize this disease.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15285805 PMCID: PMC500895 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-1-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
TGF-β1 is elevated acutely after injury to the brain and chronically in neurodegenerative disease.
| Injury/Insult or Disease | Species | Location/Cell type | Timing | Reference |
| Alzheimer's Disease | Human | Entorhinal cortex and superior temporal gyrus mRNA; Brain microvessel, Senile plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, CSF protein | Chronic | [48, 80, 82-84] |
| Vascular Dementia | Human | CSF protein | Chronic | [84] |
| Parkinson's Disease | Human | CSF dopaminergic striatal brain regions, protein | Chronic | [85, 86] |
| Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis | Human | CSF and serum protein | Chronic | [87] [88] |
| Diabetic Neuropathy | Human | Plasma protein | Chronic | [89] |
| Transient ischemia | Rat | Hippocampus/cerebellar protein; Hippocampal mRNA; Microglial mRNA and protein | 20 min-12 weeks | [90-92] [93, 94] |
| Permanent ischemia | Human; rat; Baboon | Increased mRNA in ischemic and penumbral areas | 1–15 days | [95-98] |
| Subarachnoid hemorrhage | Human | CSF protein | 1–19 days | [99] |
| Posthemorrhagic Hydrocephalus | Human | CSF protein | 1–14 days | [12, 13, 100] |
| Spinal cord injury | Human | Spinal cord mRNA | 1–48 h | [101] |
| Triethyltin exposure | Mouse | Cortical mRNA | 6 hrs | [102] |
| Excitotoxic lesion (NMDA) | Rat | Gray matter surrounding the lesion | [103] | |
| Status epilepticus | Rat | Hippocampal | 1–3 weeks | [104] |
| Kainic acid or deafferentation-induced neurodegeneration | Rat | Reactive microglia, mRNA | [105, 106] | |
| Spinal cord Contusion | Rat | Spinal cord mRNA | 0.25–10 days | [107] |
| Penetrating brain Injury | Rat | Perilesional activated glia, meningeal cells, choroid plexus mRNA and protein | 1–14 days | [108, 109] |
| Experimentally induced glaucoma | Monkey | Optic nerve head protein | Chronic | [110] |
| Multiple Sclerosis | Human | CSF protein; Mononuclear cells from blood and CSF, mRNA; Serum protein during relapses; Peri-lesional hypertrophic astrocytes, protein | Chronic | [111-114] |
| Chronic relapsing experimental autoimmune encephalitis | Mouse | Spinal cord mRNA | Chronic | [115] |
| Experimental Autoimmune Encephalitis | Rat | Spinal cord T-cell, monocyte, and microglia mRNA | Acute | [116] |
| Guillan-Barré Syndrome | Human | Serum and circulating monocyte protein | Plateau phase | [117, 118] |
| Experimental Autoimmune Neuritis | Rat | Macrophage, microglia, meningeal cells, and T-cell infiltrates | Acute | [116, 119] |
| CMV encephalitis | Human/mouse | Astrocyte mRNA | 5-13d after infection | [120] |
| ME7 scrapie model | Mouse | Brain mRNA | [121] | |
| Bacterial Meningitis | Rat Human | CSF cellular mRNA CSF protein Brain mRNA, CSF protein | Acute | [122-124] |
| Brain Abscess | Human | Peri-abscess and abscess extracellular matrix protein | Chronic | [125] |
Figure 1Phenograms of TGF-β1 and hAPP/TGF-β1 mice. Underexpression and knockout of TGF-β1 results in neurodegeneration. Overexpression of TGF-β1 in astrocytes produces phenotypes that are altered by the addition of a transgene expressing mutant human amyloid. TGF-β1-induced astrogliosis and microgliosis aid in clearing amyloid, and TGF-β1-induced vascular fibrosis traps amyloid in blood vessel walls, producing amyloid angiopathy.
Figure 2Microgliosis results from both increased and decreased levels of TGF-β1. 30-month-old TGF-β1 mice (left panel) demonstrate increased staining for F4/80, a microglial marker, in the hippocampus. A stain for Iba1, which is present in all microglia and monocytes, reveals that microglia in TGF-β1 mice are more numerous and have more cytoplasm and shorter processes than microglia in an age-matched littermates. TGF-β1 knockout mice (right panel) demonstrate dramatically increased staining with F4/80 in all brain regions and Iba1staining reveals an activated microglial morphology that is less dramatic than that seen with TGF-β1 overexpression.
Figure 3TGF-β1 overexpression in hAPP mice leads to CAA and reduces total brain amyloid. hAPP mice demonstrate amyloid plaques that are predominantly parenchymal (left panels), while bigenic hAPP/TGF-β1 mice (right panels) display fewer parenchymal amyloid plaques and have Aβ deposits localized to blood vessel walls (Aβ, green; Glut-1, red).