| Literature DB >> 27766432 |
Hans Lassmann1, Monika Bradl2.
Abstract
One of the most frequent statements, provided in different variations in the introduction of experimental studies on multiple sclerosis (MS), is that "Multiple sclerosis is a demyelinating autoimmune disease and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is a suitable model to study its pathogenesis". However, so far, no single experimental model covers the entire spectrum of the clinical, pathological, or immunological features of the disease. Many different models are available, which proved to be highly useful for studying different aspects of inflammation, demyelination, remyelination, and neurodegeneration in the central nervous system. However, the relevance of results from such models for MS pathogenesis has to be critically validated. Current EAE models are mainly based on inflammation, induced by auto-reactive CD4+ T-cells, and these models reflect important aspects of MS. However, pathological data and results from clinical trials in MS indicate that CD8+ T-cells and B-lymphocytes may play an important role in propagating inflammation and tissue damage in established MS. Viral models may reflect key features of MS-like inflammatory demyelination, but are difficult to use due to their very complex pathogenesis, involving direct virus-induced and immune-mediated mechanisms. Furthermore, evidence for a role of viruses in MS pathogenesis is indirect and limited, and an MS-specific virus infection has not been identified so far. Toxic models are highly useful to unravel mechanisms of de- and remyelination, but do not reflect other important aspects of MS pathology and pathogenesis. For all these reasons, it is important to select the right experimental model to answer specific questions in MS research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27766432 PMCID: PMC5250666 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-016-1631-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1Distribution of demyelinating lesions in MS and different EAE-based models. The sites of demyelinated lesions were shown in camera lucida drawings of human brain sections, were projected into schemes redrawn after Paxinos and Watson [124] for rat and murine brain sections, or were outlined in optic nerve and spinal cord schemes. Areas of primary demyelination are shown in green, lesions with dominant axonal loss, and secondarily demyelinated areas in blue, and cortical demyelination in brown. Shaded schemes indicate lack of sufficient information for lesion distribution
Fig. 2Basic patterns of pathology in different MS Models Part 1. Pure inflammatory models exemplified by passive transfer of CD4+ T-cells directed against myelin basic protein (MBP) in the Lewis rat. Spinal cord with massive inflammation reflected by the presence of perivenous inflammatory cuffs and diffuse infiltration of the tissue by T-cells and macrophages (a H&E; d CD3; e macrophage marker ED1). Sections stained for myelin (b, Luxol fast blue) or axons (c Bielschowsky silver impregnation) do not show demyelination or axonal loss, but there are some axons with accumulation of amyloid precursor protein (f APP), indicating a mild-to-moderate degree of (in part reversible) axonal injury. Models with chronic inflammatory axonopathy leading to focal lesions with secondary demyelination. As an example, spinal cord pathology of a NOD mouse with chronic EAE, 90 days after active sensitization with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein peptide (MOG35–55), is shown. A confluent inflammatory demyelinated lesion is present in the dorsal column of the spinal cord (g H&E, h Luxol fast blue). There is nearly complete axonal loss within the lesion (i, n Bielschowsky silver impregnation); the lesion is infiltrated by a moderate number of T-cells (j, l CD3) and shows a broad rim of activated macrophages at the lesion edges (k Mac3); ongoing tissue destruction is shown by the presence of myelin protein reactive degradation products in macrophages (m PLP) and by the presence of numerous axons with disturbed fast axonal transport (intra-axonal accumulation of amyloid precursor protein; o APP). Chronic EAE in the DA rat 60 days after active immunization with full-length recombinant myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein as a model for extensive inflammatory demyelinating disease; profound inflammation (p H&E) and widespread confluent demyelination (q Luxol fast blue), but nearly complete axonal preservation (r Bielschowsky silver impregnation) and pronounced astrogliosis (s GFAP); the areas of active demyelination are highly infiltrated by macrophages (t ED1), but contain only very few T-lymphocytes (u CD3); and myelin sheaths and myelin degradation products in macrophages are decorated by activated complement (v C9neo antigen)
Models of inflammatory demyelinating diseases: applications and limitations in MS research
| Type | Models | Characteristics | Applications | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD4+ T-cell mediated inflammation | (1) Transfer of encephalitogenic T-cells [ (2) Acute EAE induced by active sensitization with T-cell antigen or epitope [ | Highly reproducible inflammatory disease of the CNS; Inflammation by T-cells and macrophages Limited microglia activation Variable acute axonal injury Little permanent axonal loss or demyelination | Analysis of molecular mechanism involved in T-cell-mediated brain inflammation In vivo testing of anti-inflammatory treatments strategies | Only models for different CD4+ T-cell subsets (Th1, Th17 etc.) Relevance for inflammation in MS patients currently unclear |
| CD8+ T-cell mediated brain inflammation | (1) Passive Transfer models with: (a) true autoimmune T-cells [ (b) artificial “neo-auto-antigen [ (2) Virus induced inflammatory demyelinating diseases [ | CNS inflammation with CD8+ T-cells, low macrophage recruitment, profound microglia activation Direct tissue injury induced by cytotoxic T-cells In active virus models complex interaction between CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell populations | Analysis of molecular mechanisms involved in inflammation and tissue injury induced by Class I MHC restricted T-cells Analysis of mechanisms of virus clearance from CNS and direct or bystander tissue injury | So far very difficult to handle High intra-experimental variation; The dominance of CD8+ T-cells in MS lesions suggests an important role, but evidences for direct CD8+ T-cell cytotoxicity in the pathogenesis of demyelination and neurodegeneration in MS is very limited; |
| Chronic CD4+ T-cell mediated brain inflammation and inflammatory axonopathy | Chronic relapsing or progressive mouse models after active immunization with CNS antigens; Most extensive experience in C57BL/6 mice after immunization with MOG35–55 [ | Inflammation with focal confluent lesions, mainly in the spinal cord; Lesions with extensive axonal injury and loss and very little primary demyelination | Good model to study mechanisms of axonal injury and to test axono-(neuro-) protective treatment strategies | Value for analysis of primary de- and remyelination limited; Allows to analyze mechanisms of neurodegeneration induced by CD4+ T-cells and the subsequent macrophage activation; Mechanisms of neurodegeneration in MS brains are in part different; thus, validation of findings in MS is of critical importance |
| T-cell and antibody-mediated inflammatory demyelinating diseases | (1) Co-transfer models with encephalitogenic T-cells and demyelinating antibodies [ (2) Active sensitization of rats, guinea pigs or primates with MOG1–125 [ | T-cell-mediated inflammation with macrophage recruitment and activation; demyelination is induced by specific demyelinating antibodies by complement or antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity mechanisms; Extensive primary inflammatory demyelination | The current model with the closest similarity to the pathology of multiple sclerosis (inflammation, plaques of demyelination in white and grey matter; axonal preservation, variable extent of remyelination); Similar models can be used to test the pathogenicity of other auto-antibodies, such as for instance anti-Aquaporin 4 antibodies in NMO | MS patients in general do not mount a pathogenic auto-antibody response against MOG; Patients with MOG auto-antibodies have a disease, which is different from MS; Indirect immunological and neuropathological evidence in MS argues for the presence of a humoral demyelinating (cytotoxic) factor; whether this factor is an auto-antibody or another inflammatory mediator is currently unresolved |
| Experimental models with inflammatory demyelination and extensive astrocyte injury or loss | (1) Virus models with additional astrocyte infection [ (2) Models with very severe innate immunity stimulation (e.g. focal injection of LPS into the white matter [ (3) Models with pathogenic auto-antibodies against astrocytes (e.g. NMO models) [ (4) Toxic demyelination induced by ethidium bromide [ | Brain inflammation with severe astrocyte injury and astrocyte loss, associated with oligodendroglia destruction, primary demyelination and axonal preservation; extensive Schwann cell remyelination | Severe astrocyte injury is present in a small subset of acute fulminant MS cases; Astrocyte injury and loss with secondary demyelination in NMO | Although astrocyte injury is present in some fulminant MS lesions, the mechanism is currently not fully defined; mechanisms identified in the respective models have to be validated regarding the relevance for MS |
| Viral Models of inflammatory demyelination | Theiler’s virus model [ MHV (coronavirus) models [ | Virus-induced inflammatory demyelinating disease, which in many aspects reflects the disease in MS | These models allow to define the mechanisms, how anti-virus and autoimmune reactions may cooperate in the induction of inflammatory demyelination | Despite extensive search so far, no MS-specific virus infection has been identified; Disease pathogenesis in these models is highly complex and proved to be difficult to dissect |
| Toxic Models of demyelination and remyelination | (1) Cuprizone Models [ (2) Lysolecitin Model [ (3) Ethidium bromide Model [ | Highly reproducible time course of demyelination and remyelination; well-defined pathophysiological mechanisms of demyelination | Very good models to study basic biology of demyelination and remyelination | Very efficient spontaneous remyelination after cessation of the toxic injury; permanent remyelination failure, as seen in many MS lesions, is only seen in models with prolonged cuprizone intoxication |
Fig. 3Basic patterns of pathology in different MS models Part 2. MHV-induced spinal cord pathology as an example for inflammatory demyelinating lesions with extensive oligodendrocyte and astrocyte loss; large confluent demyelinated lesions in the lateral column of the spinal cord with inflammation and tissue edema (a H&E), complete demyelination (b Luxol fast blue), and nearly complete axonal preservation (c, d Bodian silver impregnation), but nearly complete loss of astrocytes (e GFAP); some of the astrocytes at the lesion edge contain virus antigen (f). The cuprizone model as an example for toxic demyelination; large hyper-cellular demyelinating lesion in the corpus callosum after 6 weeks of cuprizone exposure (g H&E). The lesion shows complete demyelination (h Luxol fast blue) and only mild or moderate axonal loss (i, l Bielschowsky silver impregnation); the site of active demyelination is highly infiltrated by macrophages and activated microglia (j Mac3); oligodendrocytes are lost within the areas of active demyelination and only preserved in the areas with intact myelin (k CNPase)
Future research strategies for experimental multiple sclerosis research
| MS-related topic | MS pathology | Suggested strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Role of CD8+ T-cells | Major contribution of CD8+ T-cells in the inflammatory process of MS [ | (1) Expand knowledge on mechanisms of inflammation and tissue injury in existing models of CD8+ T-cell-mediated brain inflammation (2) Define mechanisms, how CD8+ T-cell autoimmunity can be induced by active sensitization |
| Role of B-cells | Therapeutic effect of B-cell depleting therapies [ | Create new in vivo models to test the role of B-cells in neuroinflammation |
| Mechanisms of Demyelination | Presence of a soluble demyelinating (cytotoxic) factor in serum and cerebrospinal fluid of MS patients [ | (1) Define the nature of the demyelinating factor in serum and CSF of MS patients beyond anti-MOG antibodies (2) Define its role in different models of brain inflammation in vivo |
| Models for progressive MS | MS lesions develop on the background of pro-inflammatory microglia activation seen already in the normal white matter of age matched controls [ | (1) Test the effect of different microglia pre-activation in different models of brain inflammation (a) non-SPF environment (b) systemic innate immunity activation prior to induction of autoimmune inflammation (c) genetic models of microglia pre-activation |
Mitochondrial damage and “virtual” hypoxia play an important role in demyelination and neurodegeneration in MS, being most pronounced in the progressive stage [ | (1) Define mechanisms of tissue injury in mitochondrial mutants (2) Combine models of mitochondrial dysfunction with models of brain inflammation |