| Literature DB >> 24948809 |
Liviu-Gabriel Bodea1, Yiner Wang1, Bettina Linnartz-Gerlach1, Jens Kopatz1, Lasse Sinkkonen2, Ruth Musgrove3, Tony Kaoma4, Arnaud Muller4, Laurent Vallar4, Donato A Di Monte3, Rudi Balling2, Harald Neumann5.
Abstract
Systemic inflammatory reactions have been postulated to exacerbate neurodegenerative diseases via microglial activation. We now demonstrate in vivo that repeated systemic challenge of mice over four consecutive days with bacterial LPS maintained an elevated microglial inflammatory phenotype and induced loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. The same total cumulative LPS dose given within a single application did not induce neurodegeneration. Whole-genome transcriptome analysis of the brain demonstrated that repeated systemic LPS application induced an activation pattern involving the classical complement system and its associated phagosome pathway. Loss of dopaminergic neurons induced by repeated systemic LPS application was rescued in complement C3-deficient mice, confirming the involvement of the complement system in neurodegeneration. Our data demonstrate that a phagosomal inflammatory response of microglia is leading to complement-mediated loss of dopaminergic neurons.Entities:
Keywords: complement; microglia; neurodegeneration; neuroinflammation; phagosome; transcriptome
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24948809 PMCID: PMC6608212 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5002-13.2014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167