| Literature DB >> 30515150 |
Karen Fairlie-Clarke1, Mark Barbour1, Chelsey Wilson1, Shehla U Hridi1, Debbie Allan1, Hui-Rong Jiang1.
Abstract
Interleukin-33 (IL-33) is a well-recognized immunomodulatory cytokine which plays critical roles in tissue function and immune-mediated diseases. The abundant expression of IL-33 in brain and spinal cord prompted many scientists to explore its unique role in the central nervous system (CNS) under physiological and pathological conditions. Indeed emerging evidence from over a decade's research suggests that IL-33 acts as one of the key molecular signaling cues coordinating the network between the immune and CNS systems, particularly during the development of neurological diseases. Here, we highlight the recent advances in our knowledge regarding the distribution and cellular localization of IL-33 and its receptor ST2 in specific CNS regions, and more importantly the key roles IL-33/ST2 signaling pathway play in CNS function under normal and diseased conditions.Entities:
Keywords: IL-33; ST2; central nervous system; expression; neurological diseases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30515150 PMCID: PMC6255965 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Expression of IL-33 in several brain regions. Brains from C57BL/6 mice were sectioned coronally and immunohistochemically stained for the expression of IL-33 (red/brown) and counterstained with haematoxylin. (A–C) IL-33 is predominantly expressed in several white matter rich regions including (A) anterior forceps of corpus collosum (fmi); (B) anterior commissure (aco) and (C) the hippocampal fringe (fi) and stria terminalus (st). (D) Within the cortex, IL-33 is expressed at low levels in the somatosensory (S1) and motor cortex regions (M1/M2). (E) In the cerebellum, IL-33 is expressed through the granular, and white matter regions with minimal expression within the molecular layer. Arrowheads indicate IL-33+ cells. CPu, striatum; Cg, cingulate cortex. Scale bars represent 100 μm.
Expression of IL-33 in central nervous system cells.
| Mouse mixed glia culture: | ND | √ | ND | NT | ( |
| Mouse mixed glial culture | NT | √ | NT | NT | ( |
| Mouse mixed glial culture | NT | √ | NT | √ | ( |
| Mouse mixed glial culture | NT | √ | NT | √ | ( |
| Mouse P9 brain | ND in most MAP-2+ cells | √ | NT | √ | ( |
| Rat brain | √ | √ | ND | NT | ( |
| Rat brain | NT | √√ (S-100) | Infrequent (CD68) | √ | ( |
| MS patient brain | NT | √ | NT | NT | ( |
| Healthy and MS brain | √ (SMI-31) | √ | √ | √ (CA-II) | ( |
| Mouse brain | ND (MAP-2 and DCX) | √ | ND | √ | ( |
| Mouse brain | √ (ventral dentate gyrus) | √ (S-100β) | ND | √ | ( |
| Mouse brain | ND | √ | ND | √ (CC-1, not NG2) | ( |
| Mouse brain | NT | √ | NT | NT | ( |
| Mouse thalamus and spinal cord | NT | √ (ALDH1L1) | NT | √ (CC-1) | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | √ | √ | NT | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal dorsal horn | ND | √ | ND (CD11b) | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | ND | √ | ND | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | √ | √ | ND (CD11b) | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | ND | √ | ND (CD11b) | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | Minimal to none | √ (ALDH1L1) | Minimal to none | √ (Olig2+CC-1) | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | √ | √ | √ | √ | ( |
| Rat spinal cord | √ | √ | ND (OX-42) | √ | ( |
Expression of Il33 mRNA was performed using PCR while protein expression was studied using immunohistochemical staining and other methods. √, positive expression of IL-33; ND, not detectable; NT in gray square, not tested. Ab, antibody; MS, multiple sclerosis.
Figure 2IL-33 expression by CNS resident cells in mouse brain and spinal cord. Tissues from C57BL/6 mice were sectioned and immunohistochemically stained for the expression of IL-33 (brown), and astrocytes (GFAP), neurons (NeuN) and microglia (Iba-1) (all blue) within the (A) corpus callosum and (B) hippocampus and IL-33 co-localization assessed. RSG, retrosplenial granular cortex; CC, corpus callosum; DG, dentate gyrus; CA1-3, hippocampus. (C) In spinal cord, the majority of IL-33 expressing cells are localized to the GM, with lower levels present in the WM. IL-33 is expressed by GFAP+ astrocytes in both GM and WM regions with lower level co-localization with neurons and microglia in the GM and, GM/WM, respectively. Arrowheads indicate IL-33+ cells, arrows indicate NeuN, GFAP or Iba-1+ cells and asterisks indicate double positive cells. GM, gray matter; WM, white matter. Scale bars represent 100 μm.
Figure 3Expression of ST2 in mouse brain regions. Brains from C57BL/6 mice were sectioned coronally and stained for the expression of ST2 (red/brown) and counterstained with haematoxylin. (A) Within the cortex, ST2 was expressed at high levels in the somatosensory (S1) and motor cortex regions (M1/M2). (B) ST2 was also highly expressed throughout the hippocampus (CA1–CA3) including the dentate gyrus (DG). Arrowheads indicate ST2+ cells. CPu, striatum; Cg, cingulate cortex. Scale bars represent 100 μm.
Expression of IL-33 receptor ST2 in central nervous system cells.
| Mouse mixed glia culture: | √ ( | √ | √ | NT | ( |
| Mouse mixed glia culture: | NT | √ | √ | NT | ( |
| Rat myelinating co-culture | √ | ND | NT | √ (O4) | ( |
| MS patient brain | √ (SMI-31) | NT | NT | √ (CA-II) | ( |
| Mouse brain | ND (by FC) | √ (GLAST) (by FC) | √ (Iba-1) | ND (by FC) | ( |
| Mouse thalamus and spinal cord flow sorted cells ( | ND | ND | √ | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | √ | ND | NT | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord | √ | √ | ND (CD11b) | NT | ( |
| Mouse dorsal root ganglia | √ (Nissi) | NT | NT | NT | ( |
| Human DRG: | √ | NT | NT | NT | ( |
| Mouse spinal cord (EAE) | NT | √ | NT | √ (O1) | ( |
| Rat spinal cord | √ | √ | ND (OX-42) | √ | ( |
Expression of St2 mRNA was performed using PCR while protein expression was studied using immunohistochemical staining or other methods. √, positive expression of ST2; ND, not detectable; NT in gray square, not tested. Ab, antibody; EAE, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; FC, flow cytometry; MS, multiple sclerosis; DRG, dorsal root ganglia.
Figure 4ST2 expression by CNS resident cells in mouse brain and spinal cord. Tissues from C57BL/6 mice were sectioned and stained for the expression of ST2 (brown) and astrocytes (GFAP), neurons (NeuN) and microglia (Iba-1) (all blue) within the (A) corpus callosum and (B) hippocampus and ST2 co-localization assessed. The majority of ST2 expressing cells co-localized with GFAP+ astrocytes while low level co-localization with neurons and microglia was observed in both regions. (C) In spinal cord, the majority of ST2 expressing cells were localized to the GM, with lower levels present in the WM. ST2 was expressed by NeuN+ neurons in both GM and WM regions with lower level co-localization with astroyctes and microglia. Arrowheads indicate ST2+ cells, arrows indicate NeuN, GFAP or Iba-1+ cells and asterisks indicate double positive cells. cc, corpus callosum; GM, gray matter; WM, white matter. Scale bars represent 100 μm.
Figure 5IL-33 enhances PCP-induced changes in locomotor activity. (A) C57BL/6 mice were first habituated inside a 40 × 40cm open field maze for 1 h before being taken out of the maze and injected intraperitoneally with vehicle control (PBS) or 200 ng IL-33. After 15 min mice received an i.p. injection of either PBS or PCP (5 mg/kg), and were then placed back into the same open field maze for 1 h. Their (B) distance moved and (C) velocity were tracked via overhead cameras and analyzed. Significant (p < 0.05) pairwise differences according to Tukey's post hoc test show PCP_IL-33 > PCP > naïve and IL-33 for both distance moved and velocity. LMA: locomotor activity.
Role of IL-33/ST2 axis in neurological disease.
| Alzheimer disease (AD) | • Reduced IL-33 expression in AD brain; | ( |
| • Increased IL-33 and ST2 in AD brains, Aβ induces IL-33 production by astrocytes to mediate AD pathogenesis | ( | |
| • Increased sST2 in serum of AD patients; IL-33 reduces Aβ levels and amyloid plagues and reverses synaptic plasticity impairment and memory deficit in a mouse model | ( | |
| • Effective treatment of | ( | |
| • IL-33 expression in astrocytes increases with age and IL-33−/− aged mice display AD-like symptoms with tau abnormality and neurodegeneration | ( | |
| Multiple sclerosis (MS) | • Elevated IL-33 protein, mRNA levels in NAWM and plaque areas, and in plasma and PBMCs | ( |
| • Enhanced expression of IL-33 and ST2 in MS CNS lesion | ( | |
| • mRNA of IL-33 and ST2 increased in spinal cord of EAE rats | ( | |
| • IL-33 blockade suppresses EAE development in mice | ( | |
| • IL-33 attenuates EAE by inducing type 2 immune response | ( | |
| • IL-33 released by astrocytes and neurons suppresses EAE | ( | |
| • Male-specific IL-33 attenuates EAE through ILC2s and mast cells | ( | |
| Pain | • IL-33 is a key mediator of inflammatory hyper nociception | ( |
| • IL-33 mediates carrageenan-induced inflammatory pain via trigging TNF-α | ( | |
| • IL-33 induces hyperalgesia in naïve mice and enhanced hyperalgesia in a mouse model of chronic constriction injury via reciprocal relationship with TNF-α and IL-1β | ( | |
| • IL-33 inhibits electroacupuncture analgesia in formalin mice | ( | |
| • Spinal IL-33 and ST2 contribute to bone cancer induced pain in mice | ( | |
| • IL-33 contributes to neuropathic pain through activating astroglial and neuronal cascades, and up-regulate NMDA | ( | |
| • IL-33 induced by non-compressive lumber disk herniation in rat mediates pain through TNF-α, IL-1β and COX-2 | ( | |
| Psychiatric disorders | • IL-33 polymorphism associates with decreased susceptibility to schizophrenia | ( |
| • Serum levels of IL-33 and sST2 positively correlate with cognitive performance in schizophrenia patients, but with no difference between patients and controls | ( | |
| • IL-33−/− mice display multiple behavioral deficits, e.g., reduced anxiety and impaired social recognition | ( | |
| • IL-33−/− aged mice exhibit increased locomotor activities | ( | |
| • IL-33, sST2 and IL-1β plasma levels are not changed in ASD patients | ( | |
| • Reduced plasma IL-33 in ASD patients | ( | |
| Stroke | • sST2 is increased in plasma of stroke patients, IL-33 protects mice against stroke through IL-4 | ( |
| • IL-33 ameliorates brain injury in stroke model through promoting Th2 and suppressing Th17 responses | ( | |
| • Increased serum IL-33 in acute ischemic stroke patients | ( | |
| • IL-33/ST2 dependent microglial response limits acute ischemic brain injury | ( | |
| Traumatic CNS injury | • Oligodendrocyte-derived IL-33 induces M2 genes and aids the recovery of optic nerve injury in mice | ( |
| • IL-33 reduces secondary injury and improves recovery in a mouse contusion injury model through inducing Th2 and Treg responses | ( | |
| • IL-33 improves spinal cord injury via activating meningeal ILC2s to produce type 2 cytokines | ( | |
| Cerebral malaria | • IL-33 treatment reduces parasitaemia at early phase of infection through inducing type 2 immune responses | ( |
| • ST2 deficient mice survived longer than WT after infection | ( | |
| CNS encephalitis | • Levels of IL-33 protein and mRNA increased in the serum and CSF of neuro-Behcet's disease patients | ( |
| • IL-33 attenuates viral induced encephalitis by downregulating IFN-γ and NO production | ( | |
| CNS Toxoplasmosis | • ST2 Levels increased in brain of infected mice, ST2 deficient mice had increased susceptibility, parasite burden and encephalitis to cerebral infection | ( |
| CNS hemorrhage | • IL-33 encoding gene | ( |
| • | ( | |
| • IL-33 has neuroprotective effects in intracerebral hemorrhage in mouse | ( |