| Literature DB >> 23506036 |
Vanesa Sanchez-Guajardo1, Christopher J Barnum, Malú G Tansey, Marina Romero-Ramos.
Abstract
The role of neuroinflammation and the adaptive immune system in PD (Parkinson's disease) has been the subject of intense investigation in recent years, both in animal models of parkinsonism and in post-mortem PD brains. However, how these processes relate to and modulate α-syn (α-synuclein) pathology and microglia activation is still poorly understood. Specifically, how the peripheral immune system interacts, regulates and/or is induced by neuroinflammatory processes taking place during PD is still undetermined. We present herein a comprehensive review of the features and impact that neuroinflamation has on neurodegeneration in different animal models of nigral cell death, how this neuroinflammation relates to microglia activation and the way microglia respond to α-syn in vivo. We also discuss a possible role for the peripheral immune system in animal models of parkinsonism, how these findings relate to the state of microglia activation observed in these animal models and how these findings compare with what has been observed in humans with PD. Together, the available data points to the need for development of dual therapeutic strategies that modulate microglia activation to change not only the way microglia interact with the peripheral immune system, but also to modulate the manner in which microglia respond to encounters with α-syn. Lastly, we discuss the immune-modulatory strategies currently under investigation in animal models of parkinsonism and the degree to which one might expect their outcomes to translate faithfully to a clinical setting.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23506036 PMCID: PMC3639751 DOI: 10.1042/AN20120066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ASN Neuro ISSN: 1759-0914 Impact factor: 4.146
In vivo studies on effects of α-synuclein on microglia
ICAM, intercellular adhesion molecule; m, month; rAAV, recombinant adeno-associated virus; α-Syn, α-Synuclein; SN, substantia nigra; str, striatum; TH, tyrosine hydroxylase; w, weeks; WB, Western blots; *DM (double mutant) not occurring in humans; in italics, markers included in the studies that did not show any change. Unless otherwise noted, α-syn used was human.
| Reference | α-Syn | Animals | Observations | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wilms et al., | Oligomeric WT 0.5 ng | Direct intra-SN injection | Wistar rat | ↑Iba-1+ and 22% TH+ cell loss in SN after 1w | Protected by MAPK inhibitor semapimod |
| Yu et al., | Nitrated TAT α-syn 0.84 μg | Direct intra-SN injection | Sprague–Dawley rat | ↑Iba-1+ and GFAP+ cells in SN after 5w | TH cell death observed after 5w 34.5% and 11w 48.7%. If not nitrated, no cell death |
| Couch et al., | WT 3 μg | Direct intra-SN injection | Mice ABH Biozzi | ↑mRNA Il-1β, TGFβ and COX2 after 24h | If peripheral LPS: unclear results |
| ↑Iba-1+ cells and ICAM+ cells after 24h | |||||
| Jin et al., | Endogenous murine | MPTP-intoxication-induced murine α-syn aggregation | Prostaglandin E2 receptor subtype2 knockout | Lack of EP2 abolished MPTP-induced ↑ aggregated α-syn | |
| Miller et al., | DM A30P-A53T * | Overexpression under TH promoter | Mouse C57/Bl6 | ↑% of activated Iba-1+ cells in SN↑mRNA TGFβ SN and StrAltered expression on inflammation-related genes2009- ↑number and activated Iba-1 cells early and long-lasting in SN, not str | Microgliosis preceding cell death |
| Stefanova et al., | WT | Overexpression under PLP promoter x TLR4 knockout | Mouse (hybrid background) | ↑ DAergic cell loss and motor defects↑TNF and astrogliosis↓Phagocytosis of α-syn by microglia | |
| Watson et al., | WT | Overexpression under Thy1 promoter | Mouse hybrid C57/Bl6+DBA2 | ↑Activated Iba-1+ microglia in str (1m) in SN (22m) | |
| ↑TNF in str (1m) in SN and blood (5–6m) | |||||
| SN ↓TLR1 (1m);↑TLR1,4 and 8 (5-6m);↑TLR2 (14m) | |||||
| ↑CD4+ and CD8+ T-cells% in blood (22m) | |||||
| Theodore et al., | WT | Local rAAV-A53T-α-syn injection in SN | Mouse C57/Bl6 | ↑CD68 expression↑TNF, IL-1α, IL-6 and ICAM mRNA at 2w and TNF mRNA at 4 weeks in SNInfiltration of T-cells and B-cells | |
| Sanchez-Guajardo et al., | WT | Local rAAV-WT-α-syn injection in SN | Sprague–Dawley Rat | ↑Number of Mac1 cells and changes on profile↑In MHCII expression↑CD68 expression if cell death occursInfiltration of T-cells | |
| Chung et al., | A53T | Local rAAV-A53T-α-syn injection in SN | Sprague–Dawley Rat | ↑Levels (WB) of Iba-1 in str not in SN. Activated morphology in Str↑IL-1β, IFNγ and TNF in str not in SN |
In vitro studies of effect of α-synuclein on microglia
α-syn, α-Synuclein; O, oligomeric; F, fibrils; PF, protofibrils; N, nitrated; CM, conditioned media; ROS, reactive oxygen species; KO, knockout; *DM, double mutant not occurring in humans; ** α-syn content in CSF is not addressed; in italics, markers included in the studies that did not show any change.
| Reference | α-Syn | Type/origin | Cell | Observations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang et al., | WT | 7-days aged O-α-syn | 1. Rat mesencephalic neuro-glia | ↑ROS and PGE2 | These changes required phagocytocis of α-syn. Mediated by (but not only) NADPH oxidase |
| 2. Rat primary microglia | Activated microglia profile | ||||
| Jin et al., | WT | 1. LB disease | Prostaglandin E2 receptor subtype2 KO primary microglia | 1. Lack of EP2 ↑ α-syn clearance | |
| 2. 7-days aged O-α-syn | 2. O-α-syn induced p67 and p47 phox translocation | ||||
| P47 translocation is EP2 dependent | |||||
| Thomas et al., | Murine | Non-aggregated and aggregated (O,F and PF) N-α-syn 50–500 nM | Mouse primary microglia | ↑ROS production if α-syn aggregated. Inhibited by K+ or H+ channels blockers | ↑ ROS not due to debris presence or unspecific amyloid effect. |
| Zhang et al., | WT; A53T; A30P | Recombinant 250 nM | Rat midbrain neuroglia | DAergic toxicity in all three α-syn mediated by microglia production of superoxide and intracellular ROS. This is partially Mac-1 mediated and independent of phagocytosis | Mediated by (but not only) |
| Su et al., | WT | Recombinant 10, 50 and 250 nM | Mouse primary microglia | ↑Activated Iba1+ cells↑TNF release↑mRNA TNF, COX2, IL-1β, IL6, NOX and iNOS↑ROS | This is attenuated in CD36 KO cultures and mediated by ERK1/2 phosphorylation |
| Su et al., | (*)DM- A30P–A53T | Recombinant 2.5, 5 and 10 nM | Mouse primary microglia | ↑Activated Iba1+ cells↑mRNA TNF, IL-1β, IL6, IL10, COX2, NOX2 and iNOS↑TNF and IL-1β | This is attenuated in CD36 KO cultures and mediated by ERK1/2 phosphorylation |
| Klegeris et al., | WT; A53T; A30P; E46K; Δ71–82 | Recombinant monomeric | 1. Human THP-1. | 1. ↑TNF release by A53T and IL-1β by A53T an A30P in naïve THP-1. CM from IFN-γ primed-THP-1 exposed to any α-syn induced SHSY5Y toxicity and ↑ TNF and IL-1β release | Analysis of phosphorylation in WT α-syn-primed THP-1 showed ERK1 and 2, p38 and JNK MAP kinases activation |
| 2. Human primary microglia | 2. CM from WT IFN-γ-primed-microglia induced toxicity SHSY5Y | ||||
| Park et al., | WT; A53T; A30P; E46K; Δ1-95; NAC | Aggregated (F) and monomeric | 1. BV2. | 1. All monomeric α-syn and Δ1-95↑phagocyt Aggregated α-syn ↓phagocyt and abolish monomeric induced phagocytosis. | ↑Phagocyt not mediated by CR3, α6β1 integrin or CD47. β and γ-syn did not ↑phagocytosis |
| 2. Rat primary microglia | 2 and 3. Monomeric α-syn ↑phagocyt | ||||
| 3. RAW 264.7 murine macrophage | |||||
| Reynolds et al., | Murine | Aggregated (O) unmodified and N-α-syn 100 nM | 1. Mouse primary microglia. | GDNF and BDNF is also increase in microglia upon stimulation | |
| 2. (1) co-culture with MES23.5 | Both unmodified and N-α-syn induced TH+ cell death in co-culture or using CM from (1) | Transcriptome analysis, please refer to the original article. | |||
| ↑ mRNA in microglia: TNF, CCl2, IL-6, IL-1β, NFkB1-2, Rela, Fos, Raf1, Card10 and Casp8 | |||||
| Reynolds et al., | Murine | Aggregated | Mouse primary microglia | Complex response of microglia with both proinflammatory and putative neuroprotective profile | If unaggregated N-α-syn did not induce changes. |
| Lee et al., | WT; A53T; A30P; E46K | Recombinant monomeric 0.1, 1, 5 and 10 μM | 1. Macrophages RAW264.7 | 1. WT ↑TNF, COX2 and iNOS. All mutants ↑TNF | Same was true for β and γ-syn NAC sequence is not necessary for activation |
| 2. Human primary macrophages | 2. WT ↑TNF | ||||
| Wilms et al., | WT | Recombinant α-syn O and F 0.5, 5, 50 and 500 ng/ml | Rat primary microglia | O-α-syn most efficiently induced ameboid shape and ↑NF-κB, p38 and ERk1/2 MAP kinases and ↑nitrites production | |
| Kim et al., | WT; A53T; A30P | 1. Transient transfection | 1. BV2. | ↑CD44 expression and cleavage ↑Mt1-MMP expression by BV2 transfected and exogenous α-syn on BV2 and microglia | If transplanted |
| 2. Recombinant 100 nM | 2. Mouse primary microglia | A53T overexpression ↑BV2 migration | |||
| α-Syn overexpression in BV2 ↑ERK1/2 | |||||
| Roodveldt et al., | WT; A53T; A30P; E46K | Monomeric (0.2, 1 and 5 μg/ml) | 1. Mouse primary mixed glia2. Mouse primary microglia | ↑IL-6 Mixed all α-syn. Enrich. A30P and E46K↑IL-1β A30P and E46K↑IL-10 Mixed A30P;↓IL-10 Enrich Microg A53T↑IL-10, RANTES, MCP-1 and MIP-1α: A30P and E46K↑ MCP-1 and MIP-1α: Mixed WT↑ TNF and IFNγ Enrich A30P↑Phagocyt. WT and A53T; ↓Phagocyt. A30P and E46K | |
| Lee et al., | WT; A53T | 1. Monomeric 1, 5, 10μM. | Rat primary microglia | 1. ↑TNF, Nitrite, IL-1β and ROS; ↑NFkB and AP-1 DNA binding and MAPK phosphorylation | Inhibition of MMP-3, 8 or 9 suppresses pro-inflammatory α-syn effect |
| 2. CM SHSY5Y-expressing α-syn | 2. CM: ↑TNF, Nitrite, IL-1β and ROS | ||||
| Schiess et al., | WT | CSF from sporadic PD (**) | HTB15 human glioblastoma | ↓ growth rate↑ intracellular α-syn | Unclear whether the increase is due to of ↑ α-syn expression or ↑uptake of exogenous α-syn |
| Alvarez-Erviti et al., | WT; A53T | CM SHSY5Y-expressing α-syn | BV2 | CM Wt: N.Ch. | If MPP+ pre-treated SHSY5Y: CM WT: mRNA TNF and IL-1α; ↑TNF |
| CM A53T: mRNA Il-1β; ↑IL-1β | A53T: mRNA IL-1β; ↑IL-1β | ||||
| Recomb WT: mRNA TNF, mRNA IL-1α; ↑TNF | |||||
| Couch et al., | WT | Recombinant | BV2 | Translocation NF-κB p65 to nucleus | |
| ↑TNF release | |||||
| Beraud et al., | WT | 7-days aged O+F 50 nM | 1. BV2 | 1. ↑NO and TNF release and ↑mRNA IL-1β, Peroxiredoxine-1, Heme oxigenase-1, TLR2 and3 ↓mRNA TLR7 | Microglia is activated through a classical activation pathway. |
| 2. Mouse primary microglia | 2. ↑mRNA TLR2, 3, 1 and 7, MYD88, Iba1, NFkB, TNF and IL-1β; ↓mRNA TLR4, 6 and 9 and CD36 | ||||
| Stefanova et al., | WT | 1. Debris from U373 cells (human astrocytoma) transfected with α-syn | BV2 | TLR4-dependent phagocytosis | |
| 2. Recombinant | |||||
| Rojanathammanee et al., | WT; A53T; A30P | Transient transfection | BV2 | ↑COX2↓Phagocytosis and LAMP1↑TNF releaseA53T ↑nitrite and IL6 release | It did not change BV2 survival or lead to neuronal toxicity in co-culture |
Microglia activation and neuroinflammation in rodent models of nigral dopaminergic cell death
MPTP, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine, 6-OHDA, 6-hydroxi-dopamine; AAV, adeno associated virus; MHC I/II, major histocompatibility complex I/II; MFB: medial forbrain bundle; TLR, Toll-like-receptor; TH, thyrosine hydroxylase; DA, dopaminergic; SN, substantia nigra; Str, striatum; α-Syn, α-synuclein; WT, wild-type; Tg, transgenic; mo, months; wks, weeks; d, day(s); hr, hour(s); nd, not determined.
| Model | Species | TH+cell loss in SN | TH+fibre loss in Str | Gliosis in SN | MHC II | CD68 | Comment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subchronic MPTP | Mouse | 2 hr peak d7 | 2 hr recovered by d28 | Peak at d1, persists at lower levels to d21 | 2 hr | nd | C1q expression (after 2 hr) | Depboylu et al., |
| Intravenous MPTP, chronic vs subacute | Cynomolgus monkey | Subacute <acute | nd | nd | all positive; peak at 6 mo for chronic and persists to 35 mo | nd | Vazquez-Claverie et al., | |
| Unilateral intra-SN delivery of two different dose of AAV2/4-αSyn | Rat | Only at high α-syn dose (4 wks) | Progressive in both groups high >> low dose | Neurodegeneration of greater magnitude; peak at 4 wks and prior to cell death (8 wks) | Neurodegeneration > cell death; peak at 4 wks, persists to 15 wks | Only cell death, at all times, peak 8 wks | T cells and B cell infiltration, neurodegeneration; MHC II+ in Str | Sanchez-Guajardo et al., |
| Unilateral intra-SN delivery of AAV2/5-WT or A53T α Syn | Marmoset monkey | A53T α-syn after 12 mo | nd | WT 100% increase A53T 80% increase | A53T > WT | nd | HLA-DR+ CD19+ cells; 4 morphologies, A53T more polarized than WT | Barkholt et al., |
| Unilateral intra-SN delivery of AAV2-α-Syn | Mouse | nd | nd | nd | nd | 4 wks, 2 and 12 mo | stereologic quantification of lymphocytes; IgG deposition | Theodore et al., |
| Unilateral injection 6-OHDA in MFB | Rat | From d3 peak d9 | nd | From d1; peak d15 | From d1; peak at d9 (>CD68); persists to d15 | From d3 peak at d15 (>MHC II) | MHC II in contact with neurites or live cells; CD68 in contact with caspase+ cells | Marinova-Mutafchieva et al., |
| Unilateral injection 6-OHDA in nigrostriatal system | Rat | 50% d1 | nd | From d5 activated; peak at d7–14 and persists to d35 | nd | nd | Two morphologically distinct microglia; activated: big stoma, short processes | Henry et al., |
| Unilateral injection 6-OHDA in nigrostriatal system | rat | nd | nd | nd | from d4-6, d6< MHC I d30 present (no MHC I); d90 absent | nd | MHC I: d3 look like leucocytes, d4–6 microglia | Akiyama and McGeer, |
| Intranasal injection of 6-OHDA | Rat | 50% | 75% | Yes | nd | nd | Preceded onset of dopaminergic loss | Armentero et al., |
| Transgenic α-Syn overexpression | Tg mice (Thy1 promoter) | Non | Non | From 1mo in Str; from 5-6mo in SN | After 14mo in Str | nd | Gliosis and MHC II expression independent of DA cell loss; T cells ↑in serum (22 mo); Altered TLR expression | Watson et al., |
Targeted immunomodulatory interventions in pre-clinical models of nigral cell death and their effects on PD-relevant outcomemeasures
MPTP, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine, 6-OHDA, 6-hydroxi-dopamine; AAV, adeno associated virus; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; CFA, complete Freund's adjuvant; iFA, incomplete Freund's adjuvant; MHC II, Major Histocompatibility Complex II; TH, Tyrosine Hydroxylase; Th, T helper CD4+ cell; Treg, regulatory CD4+ T cell; DA, dopamine; L-DOPA, L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine; dnTNF, dominant negative Tumor Necrosis Factor; GDNF, glia cell line derived neurotrophic factor; TGFβ, transforming growth factor β; PDGF-β, platelet derived growth factor β; NO, nitric oxide; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; NADPH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate-oxidase; COX-2, prostaglandin-endoperoxidase synthase 2; SN, substantia nigra; SNpc, substantia nigra pars compacta; Str, striatum; α-Syn, α-synuclein; N- α-Syn, Nitrated- α-synuclein; WT, wild-type; wks, weeks; d, day(s); hr, hour(s).
| Model | Target | Effect | Reference(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| dnTNF | 6-OHDA | Soluble TNF | Rescue DA neurons | McCoy et al., |
| GDNF (striatal) | MPTP / 6-OHDA | Neurons | Rescue DA neurons | Lo Bianco et al., |
| GDNF (nigral) | AAV-αsyn overexpression | Neurons | No effect | Lo Bianco et al., |
| Celecoxib | Striatal 6-OHDA | COX-2 | Decreased microglia activationPrevented neurodegeneration | Sanchez-Pernaute et al., |
| Hydroden Sulfide L-DOPA | Cell lines untreated rats | Neurons | Increase DA and glutathione in brainDecreased IL-6/TNF and NO by microglia | Lee et al., |
| Minocycline | MPTP | Microglia | Prevents NADPH activation, IL-1 production | Wu et al., |
| Minocycline | Cell lines with excitotoxins | Microglia | Reduced NO and IL-1 | Tikka et al., |
| Minocycline | MPTP | Microglia | Reduced microglia activation but increased DA cell loss | Yang et al., |
| Naloxone | LPS | Microglia | Reduced superoxide | Liu et al., |
| Naloxone | LPS | Microglia | Prevented DA cell loss | Lu et al., |
| Dexamethasone | Intranigral LPS | Microglia | Prevented catecholamine, TH activity loss | Castano et al., |
| Glatiramer acetate (GA) = Copolymer 1 with CFA | MPTP T cell transfer from GA immunized animals | T cells | Attenuation SN cell loss in dose dependent mannerT cell accumulation in SNcGDNF induction from astrocytesReduced microgliosis (Note: serum from the immunized animals was ineffective) | Benner et al., |
| Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) with CFA or CFA | MPTP immunization of the animals previous MPTP deliver | Peripheral immune system | Partial rescue of DA neuronsNo effect of MOG administration after MPTPCFA alone was partly protective | Kurkowska-Jastrzebska et al., |
| Systemic CFA | CFA treatment previous to 6-OHDA | Peripheral immune system | Rescues long term behaviour impairmentInduces GDNF in striatumRescues TH+ cells in SNDecreases CD11b expression. Microglia morphology is changedNo effect on astrogliaModerate, transient pro-inflammatory cytokines | Armentero et al., |
| Live Bacill Calmett-Guerin (BCG); TH in CFA; Copaxone in CFA; CFA alone | MPTP immunization 10d prior | Peripheral immune system | CFA had greater effect than TH or CopaxoneBCG related to | Yong et al., |
| Anti-CD3 activated CD4+CD25+ T cells | Adoptive transfer 12hr after last MPTP dose | Microglia | Changes in CD11b reactivityIncreased IL-10 and TGFβ in midbrainDecreased iNOS and TNF in midbrainIncreased TH+ neuron survival | Reynolds et al., |
| Treg vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) or Nα-syn both in CFA/iFA | MPTP T cell transfer from VIP or Na-syn immunized animals or Treg | Lymphocytes | Reynolds et al., | |
| α-syn in CFA/iFA CFA/iFA alone | AAV-αsyn SN expressing rats previously immunized with α-syn (150 μg in CFA, 10 wks previous 100 μg in iFA, 6 wks previous) | Peripheral immune system | Induction of GDNF in strAccumulation of Treg in SN + strReduction of pathological α-syn aggregatesDistinct microglia activation (MHC II+, CD4+)α-syn specific IgG deposition on neurons | Sanchez-Guajardo et al., |
| α-syn in CFA/iFA CFA/iFA alone | α-syn overexpressing mice under the PDGF-β promoter 8 week vaccination scheme (80 μg in CFA, two weeks after 80 μg in iFA, then once a month) | Peripheral immune system | Increased synaptophysin levelsAntibody deposition on neurons (intercellular)Antibody-mediated lysosomal degradation of α-syn | Masliah et al., |
| Passive immunization with α-syn antibody | α-syn overexpressing mice under the PDGF-β promoter | Neurons | Reduced astroglia activationClearance of pathological α-syn aggregates | Masliah et al., |
Figure 1The specific interaction of microglia with extraneuronal α-syn influences the balance between M1 compared with M2 activation states and determines the extent of DA neuron survival compared with neuron death
α-Syn from DA neurons is taken up by microglia. Initially, these M2 microglia produce anti-inflammatory and tissue repair factors to promote survival, as well as modify the BBB by producing IL-6 and IL-1, which allows for infiltration of peripheral immune cells. Over time, the accumulation of α-syn or the recognition of α-syn by microglia through different mechanisms (synapse snatching, phagocytosis, pinocytosis, TLR2&4, Mac1 and FcγR), leads to a phenotypic shift in their response from M2 to M1. M1 microglia produce pro-inflammatory cytokines and RNS/ROS that are toxic to DA neurons, and recruit peripheral immune cells with a Th1 and/or Th17 phenotype. This toxic environment created by microglia is a perfect storm that could facilitate the progressive loss of DA neurons observed in PD. Therapeutic strategies should consider ways to aid microglial processing of α-syn in a way that favours an M2 microglial phenotype, as this would favour the induction of Treg and α-syn-specific IgG production, both of which have been shown to be protective and help to clear α-syn deposition.