| Literature DB >> 26273481 |
Stefano Morara1, Anna Maria Colangelo2, Luciano Provini3.
Abstract
Microglia-induced maladaptive plasticity is being recognized as a major cause of deleterious self-sustaining pathological processes that occur in neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory diseases. Microglia, the primary homeostatic guardian of the central nervous system, exert critical functions both during development, in neural circuit reshaping, and during adult life, in the brain physiological and pathological surveillance. This delicate critical role can be disrupted by neural, but also peripheral, noxious stimuli that can prime microglia to become overreactive to a second noxious stimulus or worsen underlying pathological processes. Among regulators of microglia, neuropeptides can play a major role. Their receptors are widely expressed in microglial cells and neuropeptide challenge can potently influence microglial activity in vitro. More relevantly, this regulator activity has been assessed also in vivo, in experimental models of brain diseases. Neuropeptide action in the central nervous system has been associated with beneficial effects in neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory pathological experimental models. This review describes some of the mechanisms of the microglia maladaptive plasticity in vivo and how neuropeptide activity can represent a useful therapeutical target in a variety of human brain pathologies.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26273481 PMCID: PMC4529944 DOI: 10.1155/2015/135342
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neural Plast ISSN: 1687-5443 Impact factor: 3.599
Figure 1Schematic summary of microglia roles in physiological and pathological conditions in relation with the neuropeptide homeostatic influence on microglia. MPTP: 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine; 6-OHDA: 6-hydroxydopamine; Aβ: beta-amyloid; SCI: spinal cord injury.
In vivo administration of neuropeptides in the central nervous system produces beneficial effects in experimental models of brain diseases.
| Neuropeptide | Experimental model | Delivery method/place | Administration: single/chronic | Administration timing | Effects on pathology (1), microglia (2) [timing of assessment] | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VIP | Brain trauma: vertical stab wound operation in periventricular area by glass micropipette | Micropipette/the same place as trauma | Single | The same time as trauma | (1) Reduced neuronal cell loss and inflammatory cytokine expression, | [ |
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| VIP | MPTP toxicity (Parkinson's disease model) | Micropipette? (not described)/substantia nigra | Single | One hour after i.p. injection of MPTP | (1) Reduced nigro-striatal dopaminergic neuron loss [7 days] and inflammatory cytokine/iNOS expression [12 hrs], | [ |
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| PACAP (+hMSCs) | Spinal cord injury (by weight drop device, 127) | Microsyringe (31-gauge needle)/spinal cord | Single | 7 days after injury (the same time for PACAP and hMSCs) | (1) Increased motor functional recovery [31 days], | [ |
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| PACAP | Permanent focal ischemia | Transplanted PACAP-producing stem cells/i.c.v. | Chronic PACAP production | Transplant: 3 days after ischemia | (1) Decreased neurological severity score [7, 14 days], | [ |
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| CGRP | EAE (MS model) | Osmotic minipumps/intrathecal (lumbar CSF) | Chronic | 2 days after immunization | (1) Decreased motor impairment score, | [ |
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| Apelin-13 | Transient focal ischemia/reperfusion (stroke model) | i.c.v. | Single | The same time as reperfusion | (1) Decreased neurological score, reduction of infarct volume, decreased myeloperoxidase activity, decreased inflammatory markers, | [ |
MPTP: 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1, 2, 3, 6-tetrahydropyridine; hMSCs: human mesenchymal stem cells; i.c.v.: intracerebroventricularly; EAE: experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; MS: multiple sclerosis; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid.