| Literature DB >> 35028005 |
Yituo Chen1,2,3, Haojie Zhang1,2,3, Xinli Hu1,2,3, Wanta Cai1,2,3, Wenfei Ni1,2,3, Kailiang Zhou1,2,3.
Abstract
Central nervous system (CNS) injury is divided into brain injury and spinal cord injury and remains the most common cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Previous reviews have defined numerous inflammatory cells involved in this process. In the human body, neutrophils comprise the largest numbers of myeloid leukocytes. Activated neutrophils release extracellular web-like DNA amended with antimicrobial proteins called neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). The formation of NETs was demonstrated as a new method of cell death called NETosis. As the first line of defence against injury, neutrophils mediate a variety of adverse reactions in the early stage, and we consider that NETs may be the prominent mediators of CNS injury. Therefore, exploring the specific role of NETs in CNS injury may help us shed some light on early changes in the disease. Simultaneously, we discovered that there is a link between NETosis and other cell death pathways by browsing other research, which is helpful for us to establish crossroads between known cell death pathways. Currently, there is a large amount of research concerning NETosis in various diseases, but the role of NETosis in CNS injury remains unknown. Therefore, this review will introduce the role of NETosis in CNS injury, including traumatic brain injury, cerebral ischaemia, CNS infection, Alzheimer's disease, and spinal cord injury, by describing the mechanism of NETosis, the evidence of NETosis in CNS injury, and the link between NETosis and other cell death pathways. Furthermore, we also discuss some agents that inhibit NETosis as therapies to alleviate the severity of CNS injury. NETosis may be a potential target for the treatment of CNS injury, so exploring NETosis provides a feasible therapeutic option for CNS injury in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35028005 PMCID: PMC8752220 DOI: 10.1155/2022/3235524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Mechanism of suicidal NETosis and induction of NETosis. PMA or bacteria combine with receptors and activate Ras and then activate PKC through the Raf-MEK-ERK pathway. PKC induces production of ROS by NADPH oxidase. ROS trigger rupture of azurephil granules and release azurosomes, which include NE and MPO. NE and MPO implicated in decondensation of chromatin. Finally, NETs are released through formation of GSDMD. A23187 induces an increase in Ca2+ concentration in mitochondria, which activate the opening of mPTP and produce mtROS. PAD4 moves into the nucleus and catalyses citrullination of histones (H3, H2A, and H4), through which it induces chromatin decondensation. OAP1 maintains the supply of NAD+, which later turns into NADH under the influence of glycolysis, and finally, NADH transfers electrons in the mitochondrial electron transport complex, which provides ATP for NET formation.
Potential drugs targeted to NETosis.
| Drugs | Target | Model | Potential mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apocynin | NOX2 | Primary human neutrophils | Decrease production of ROS by inhibiting NOX2 | [ |
| VAS2870 | NOX2 | Primary human neutrophils | Decrease production of ROS by inhibiting NOX2 | [ |
| DNase1 | DNA | NZB/W F1 hybrid mice | Endonuclease to digest extracellular DNA and degrade NETs | [ |
| Cl-Amidine | Cys645 | Mice | Irreversible inhibition of PAD4 | [ |
| F-Amidine | Cys645 | Mice | Irreversible inhibition of PAD4 | [ |
| GSK484 | Low-calcium (2 mM Ca) form of PAD4 | Mice | Reversible inhibition of PAD4 | [ |
| CsA | PPIase | Primary human neutrophils and CGD neutrophils | Inhibit mPTP open by blocking the PPIase activity of mitochondrial cyclophilin CypD | [ |
| SfA | PPIase | Primary human neutrophils and CGD neutrophils | Inhibit mPTP open by blocking the PPIase activity of mitochondrial cyclophilin CypD | [ |
| MeVal4CsA | PPIase | Primary human neutrophils and CGD neutrophils | Inhibit mPTP open by blocking PPIase activity of mitochondrial cyclophilin CypD | [ |
| BKA | ANT | Primary human neutrophils and CGD neutrophils | Inhibit mPTP open by freezing adenine nucleotide ANT in the matrix-oriented conformation | [ |