| Literature DB >> 26474039 |
Simonetta Papa1, Ilaria Caron1, Eugenio Erba2, Nicolò Panini2, Massimiliano De Paola3, Alessandro Mariani3, Claudio Colombo4, Raffaele Ferrari5, Diego Pozzer1, Elisa R Zanier1, Francesca Pischiutta1, Jacopo Lucchetti6, Andrea Bassi7, Gianluca Valentini7, Giulio Simonutti7, Filippo Rossi5, Davide Moscatelli5, Gianluigi Forloni1, Pietro Veglianese8.
Abstract
Many efforts have been performed in order to understand the role of recruited macrophages in the progression of spinal cord injury (SCI). Different studies revealed a pleiotropic effect played by these cells associated to distinct phenotypes (M1 and M2), showing a predictable spatial and temporal distribution in the injured site after SCI. Differently, the role of activated microglia in injury progression has been poorly investigated, mainly because of the challenges to target and selectively modulate them in situ. A delivery nanovector tool (poly-ε-caprolactone-based nanoparticles) able to selectively treat/target microglia has been developed and used here to clarify the temporal and spatial involvement of the pro-inflammatory response associated to microglial cells in SCI. We show that a treatment with nanoparticles loaded with minocycline, the latter a well-known anti-inflammatory drug, when administered acutely in a SCI mouse model is able to efficiently modulate the resident microglial cells reducing the pro-inflammatory response, maintaining a pro-regenerative milieu and ameliorating the behavioral outcome up to 63 days post injury. Furthermore, by using this selective delivery tool we demonstrate a mechanistic link between early microglia activation and M1 macrophages recruitment to the injured site via CCL2 chemokine, revealing a detrimental contribution of pro-inflammatory macrophages to injury progression after SCI.Entities:
Keywords: Inflammation; Macrophages; Microglia; Minocycline; Nanoaprticles; Spinal cord injury
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26474039 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2015.10.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479