| Literature DB >> 27446913 |
Amy F Lloyd1, Veronique E Miron1.
Abstract
Remyelination is an example of central nervous system (CNS) regeneration, whereby myelin is restored around demyelinated axons, re-establishing saltatory conduction and trophic/metabolic support. In progressive multiple sclerosis, remyelination is limited or fails altogether which is considered to contribute to axonal damage/loss and consequent disability. Macrophages have critical roles in both CNS damage and regeneration, such as remyelination. This diverse range in functions reflects the ability of macrophages to acquire tissue microenvironment-specific activation states. This activation is dynamically regulated during efficient regeneration, with a switch from pro-inflammatory to inflammation-resolution/pro-regenerative phenotypes. Although, some molecules and pathways have been implicated in the dynamic activation of macrophages, such as NFκB, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underpinning plasticity of macrophage activation are unclear. Identifying mechanisms regulating macrophage activation to pro-regenerative phenotypes may lead to novel therapeutic strategies to promote remyelination in multiple sclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: inflammation; macrophages; microglia; multiple sclerosis; myelin; plasticity; regeneration; remyelination
Year: 2016 PMID: 27446913 PMCID: PMC4914869 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2016.00060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Summary of microglia/macrophage phenotypic and functional characteristics during CNS injury and regeneration .
| Spinal cord injury–electromechanical displacement | iNOS, CD16/32, CD86, IFNy, Arginase-1, Mannose Receptor | Poor axonal regeneration associated with decreased Arginase-1 and Mannose Receptor expression | Kigerl et al., |
| Spinal cord injury–contusion | Arginase-1, IL-1β, IL-4Rα | Poor regeneration associated with lower IL-4Rα expression on monocytes of aged mice | Fenn et al., |
| CNS IL-4 injection promoted Arginase-1 in macrophages, increased oligodendrogenesis and improved regeneration | |||
| Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (EAE) | iNOS, Arginase-1 | Increased iNOS associated with more severe disease | Mikita et al., |
| Increased Arginase-1+ macrophages associated with milder disease and recovery of symptoms | |||
| LPC-mediated demyelination of the corpus callosum | 3 dpl–iNOS, CD16/32, TNFα | OPC proliferation | Miron et al., |
| 10 dpl–Arginase-1, Mannose Receptor, IGF-1 | OPC differentiation into myelinating oligodendrocytes | ||
| Cuprizone model of demyelination | CX3CR1 | CX3CR1 knockout mice displayed insufficient myelin debris clearance and impaired remyelination | Lampron et al., |
Figure 1Microglia/macrophage functional phenotypes during CNS regeneration of myelin. Following focal demyelination of the adult mouse brain, microglia/macrophages are activated to a pro-inflammatory (iNOS+ TNFα+ CD16/32+) phenotype which drives OPC proliferation but is not required for remyelination to proceed. A switch to an ant-inflammatory/pro-regenerative phenotype (arginase-1+ mannose receptor+ IGF-1+) occurs which is needed for progenitors to differentiate into mature oligodendrocytes and remyelination to subsequently take place.