| Literature DB >> 22747919 |
Li Tian1, Li Ma, Tiina Kaarela, Zhilin Li.
Abstract
The central nervous system (CNS) is now known to actively communicate with the immune system to control immune responses both centrally and peripherally. Within the CNS, while studies on glial cells, especially microglia, have highlighted the importance of this cell type in innate immune responses of the CNS, the immune regulatory functions of other cell types, especially neurons, are largely unknown. How neuroimmune cross-talk is homeostatically maintained in neurodevelopment and adult plasticity is even more elusive. Inspiringly, accumulating evidence suggests that neurons may also actively participate in immune responses by controlling glial cells and infiltrated T cells. The potential clinical application of this knowledge warrants a deeper understanding of the mutual interactions between neurons and other types of cells during neurological and immunological processes within the CNS, which will help advance diagnosis, prevention, and intervention of various neurological diseases. The aim of this review is to address the immune function of both glial cells and neurons, and the roles they play in regulating inflammatory processes and maintaining homeostasis of the CNS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22747919 PMCID: PMC3410819 DOI: 10.1186/1742-2094-9-155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Figure 1A simplified schematic illustration of the interaction between the trios of neurons, astrocytes, and microglia in the CNS under the normal (a) and pathological conditions (b). Healthy neurons are able to tightly regulate the activation of their neighboring glial cells. Meanwhile both astrocytes and microglia help maintain the neuronal activity. Under various diseased conditions, this homeostasis is broken so that neurons lose their controlling ability but instead deliver damage signals to glial cells, which in turn may exacerbate neuronal damage through inflammation. The cross-talk among astrocytes and microglia themselves and its aftermath on neurons is currently not very clear.
Immune properties of glia and neurons in the CNS
| | | | |
| PRRs | High [ | High [ | Low [ |
| Phagocytic receptors | High [ | Low [ | Unknown |
| Cytokine production | | | |
| Pro-inflammatory | Yes [ | Yes [ | Yes [ |
| Anti-inflammatory | Yes [ | Yes [ | Yes [ |
| | | | |
| MHC classes | I & II [ | I & II [ | I [ |
| Co-stimulatory molecules | Inducible [ | Low/inducible | Unknown |
| Antigen presentation | Yes [ | Controversial [ | Unknown |
| T-cell differentiation | Th1, Th2 [ | Th2 [ | Largely unknown |
| | | Th1 [ | |
| | | Treg [ | |
| | | | |
| T cells | Yes [ | Yes [ | Yes [ |
| Microglia | Yes [ | Yes [ | Yes [ |
Pro- and anti-inflammatory molecules expressed by glia and neurons
| | | |
| Soluble factors | TNF, IFN-γ, IL-1β [ | IL-4, IL-10, IFN-β, TGF-β [ |
| | CXCL1,2,12, CCL2,5,10,19 [ | BDNF, GDNF [ |
| | Glutamate; NO, ATP [ | TIMPs [ |
| | MMPs [ | |
| | HMGB1, heat-shock proteins [ | |
| Membrane proteins | TLRs, RAGE, LFA-1, MAC-1, CRs, FcRβ [ | CD45, CD91, CD200R, CD172a [ |
| | | |
| Soluble factors | TNF, IFN-γ, IL-1β [ | IL-4, IL-10, IFN-β, TGF-β [ |
| | Glutamate; NO, ATP; MMPs [ | BDNF, GDNF [ |
| Membrane proteins | TLRs, RAGE, ICAM-1, CRs [ | FasL [ |
| | | |
| Soluble factors | CXCL10, CCL21 [ | TGF-β [ |
| Glutamate, dopamine [ | GABA [ | |
| NO, ATP; Substance P [ | [ | |
| Proteoglycans [ | ||
| NGF, BDNF, NT3, GDNF, CNTF [ | ||
| Membrane proteins | TLRs [ | CD22 [ |