| Literature DB >> 26661156 |
Kazuhide Hayakawa1, Loc-Duyen D Pham2, Ji Hae Seo3, Nobukazu Miyamoto2, Takakuni Maki2, Yasukazu Terasaki2, Sava Sakadžić4, David Boas4, Klaus van Leyen2, Christian Waeber5, Kyu-Won Kim6, Ken Arai2, Eng H Lo2.
Abstract
There are numerous barriers to white matter repair after central nervous system injury and the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully understood. In this study, we propose the hypothesis that inflammatory macrophages in damaged white matter attack oligodendrocyte precursor cells via toll-like receptor 4 signaling thus interfering with this endogenous progenitor recovery mechanism. Primary cell culture experiments demonstrate that peritoneal macrophages can attack and digest oligodendrocyte precursor cells via toll-like receptor 4 signaling, and this phagocytosis of oligodendrocyte precursor cells can be inhibited by using CD200-Fc to downregulate toll-like receptor 4. In an in vivo model of white matter ischemia induced by endothelin-1, treatment with CD200-Fc suppressed toll-like receptor 4 expression in peripherally circulating macrophages, thus restraining macrophage phagocytosis of oligodendrocyte precursor cells and leading to improved myelination. Taken together, these findings suggest that deleterious macrophage effects may occur after white matter ischemia, whereby macrophages attack oligodendrocyte precursor cells and interfere with endogenous recovery responses. Targeting this pathway with CD200 may offer a novel therapeutic approach to amplify endogenous oligodendrocyte precursor cell-mediated repair of white matter damage in mammalian brain.Entities:
Keywords: CD200; macrophage; oligodendrocyte precursors; phagocytosis; white matter injury
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26661156 PMCID: PMC4821018 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X15606148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200