| Literature DB >> 18671877 |
Stefan M Gold1, Sara Chalifoux, Barbara S Giesser, Rhonda R Voskuhl.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multiple sclerosis is a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system with a pronounced neurodegenerative component. It has been suggested that novel treatment options are needed that target both aspects of the disease. Evidence from basic and clinical studies suggests that testosterone has an immunomodulatory as well as a potential neuroprotective effect that could be beneficial in MS.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18671877 PMCID: PMC2518142 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-5-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Figure 1Immunomodulation and growth factor induction by testosterone treatment in 10 male MS patients. A, Testosterone treatment significantly decreased CD4+ T cell and increased CD16/56+ NK cell percentages. B, Treatment also significantly decreased delayed type hypersensitivity recall responses. C-F, In addition, treatment significantly decreased IL-2 and increased TGFβ1, BDNF and PDGF-BB levels produced by PHA stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) during testosterone treatment (months 3–12) compared to baseline (base). Protein levels are expressed as the mean percent change compared with the mean from two pretreatment baseline time points. Mean month 12 concentrations were 670.5 ± 223.4 pg/ml for IL-2, 1552.0+273.3 pg/ml for TGFβ1, 246.1 ± 40.37 pg/ml for BDNF and 42.6 ± 15.6 pg/ml for PDGF-BB, respectively.
Figure 2Growth factors reduce neurotoxicity in vitro. Neuroprotection against glutamate toxicity (1 mM for 2 h) by growth factors at concentrations similar to those at treatment month 12 in the clinical trial (2000 pg/ml TGFβ1, 500 pg/ml BDNF, 100 pg/ml PDGF-BB). A-C, Brightfield microscopy images indicate that addition of growth factors during glutamate exposure induced partial protection of axonal integrity in those cultures (black arrows) and decreased the number of TUNEL positive cells (white triangles), representative images shown from 8 experiments. D, a protective effect was confirmed quantitatively by a significant reduction in LDH release. LDH data are shown from 8 independent experiments with wells run in duplicate for each condition.