| Literature DB >> 33050925 |
Chiara Burgaletto1, Antonio Munafò1, Giulia Di Benedetto1, Cettina De Francisci1, Filippo Caraci2,3, Rosaria Di Mauro1,4, Claudio Bucolo1, Renato Bernardini5,6, Giuseppina Cantarella1.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, characterized by progressive degeneration and loss of neurons in specific regions of the central nervous system. Chronic activation of the immune cells resident in the brain, peripheral immune cell trafficking across the blood-brain barrier, and release of inflammatory and neurotoxic factors, appear critical contributors of the neuroinflammatory response that drives the progression of neurodegenerative processes in AD. As the neuro-immune network is impaired in course of AD, this review is aimed to point out the essential supportive role of innate and adaptive immune response either in normal brain as well as in brain recovery from injury. Since a fine-tuning of the immune response appears crucial to ensure proper nervous system functioning, we focused on the role of the TNF superfamily member, TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), which modulates both the innate and adaptive immune response in the pathogenesis of several immunological disorders and, in particular, in AD-related neuroinflammation. We here summarized mounting evidence of potential involvement of TRAIL signaling in AD pathogenesis, with the aim to provide clearer insights about potential novel therapeutic approaches in AD.Entities:
Keywords: Immune response; Neuroinflammation; Proinflammatory cytokines; Regulatory T cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33050925 PMCID: PMC7556967 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-020-01968-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Fig. 1Central and peripheral inflammatory/immune response in neurodegeneration. Upon injury, disease, or inflammation, damaged neurons could release self-antigens or modified proteins that activate resting microglia. Activated microglia responds to these stimuli, by production of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, reactive oxygen, and nitrogen species. When such first innate immune-related process is not completely resolutive and the inflammatory stimuli persist, the microglia-mediated mechanisms remain trapped in a vicious cycle, characterized by chronic pro-inflammatory cytokine production linked to a cascade of neurotoxic events leading to neuronal death. Substantial recruitment of monocytes into the AD brain begins when Aβ deposition and associated neuronal damage triggers a local immune response, activating astrocytes and microglia. Activated pro-inflammatory microglia also release astrocyte-activating signals which induce neuroinflammatory astrocytes that, in turn, amplify the neurodegenerative cycle. In addition, misfolded proteins not adequately removed may drain into peripheral lymphoid tissues, wherein they are presented by antigen presenting cells to naïve T cells, thereafter mounting an adaptive immune response against these antigens. Depending upon antigen-presenting cell signals, naïve T cells differentiate into antigen-specific T effector cells (Th1, Th2, Th17, and cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) or regulatory T (Treg) cells). Specifically, Th1 and Th17 cells cross the blood-brain barrier and directly contribute to neuroinflammation through the production of neurotoxic and proinflammatory factors that act on glial cells. Consequently, activated microglia and astrocytes respond by releasing high amounts of chemokines that assist the infiltration of a second wave of effector T cells into the brain. CD8+ CTLs recognize antigen presented by MHC class I on neurons to induce perforin- and/or granzyme-mediated cytolysis. In response to inflammatory events, Treg cells dampen down neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration
Fig. 2Fine-tuning of immune response by TRAIL in the brain. Under brain inflammatory conditions, TRAIL is abundantly released by activated glia, infiltrated peripheral monocytes and injured neurons. TRAIL acts as a potential death signal by interacting with its receptors expressed in neurons, microglia, monocytes, lymphocytes, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes
Pathophysiological implications of TRAIL in Alzheimer’s disease
| Alzheimer’s disease model | TRAIL-based treatment | Main findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| SH-SY5Y neuronal-like cells | rTRAIL TRAIL-neutralizing monoclonal antibody | TRAIL mediates Aβ-neurotoxicity in vitro | [ |
| Human AD brain | / | TRAIL is specifically expressed in Alzheimer’s disease brain | [ |
SH-SY5Y neuronal-like cells Primary mouse cortical neurons | anti-TRAIL-R/DR5 antibody | Blockade of TRAIL-death receptor DR5 signaling prevents Aβ-neurotoxicity in vitro | [ |
| 3xTgAD | TRAIL-neutralizing monoclonal antibody | Neutralization of TRAIL is associated with functional recovery, decreased Aβ burden and rebalance of both central and peripheral immune response in vivo. | [ |
| 3xTgAD | TRAIL-neutralizing monoclonal antibody | Neutralization of TRAIL restrain peripheral and CNS inflammatory/immune response along with decreased microglial TNFα production, reduced accumulation of both Aβ and p-Tau protein in the hippocampus of 3xTg-AD mice. | [ |
Summary of the most interesting evidences of the involvement of TRAIL in the pathophysiological events related to neuroinflammatory conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease, in view of a potential future clinical development of TRAIL-based therapeutic strategies