| Literature DB >> 35586058 |
Paola Nobili1, Weida Shen2, Katarina Milicevic3, Jelena Bogdanovic Pristov4, Etienne Audinat1, Ljiljana Nikolic5.
Abstract
Epilepsy and multiple sclerosis (MS), two of the most common neurological diseases, are characterized by the establishment of inflammatory environment in the central nervous system that drives disease progression and impacts on neurodegeneration. Current therapeutic approaches in the treatments of epilepsy and MS are targeting neuronal activity and immune cell response, respectively. However, the lack of fully efficient responses to the available treatments obviously shows the need to search for novel therapeutic candidates that will not exclusively target neurons or immune cells. Accumulating knowledge on epilepsy and MS in humans and analysis of relevant animal models, reveals that astrocytes are promising therapeutic candidates to target as they participate in the modulation of the neuroinflammatory response in both diseases from the initial stages and may play an important role in their development. Indeed, astrocytes respond to reactive immune cells and contribute to the neuronal hyperactivity in the inflamed brain. Mechanistically, these astrocytic cell to cell interactions are fundamentally mediated by the purinergic signalling and involve metabotropic P2Y1 receptors in case of astrocyte interactions with neurons, while ionotropic P2X7 receptors are mainly involved in astrocyte interactions with autoreactive immune cells. Herein, we review the potential of targeting astrocytic purinergic signalling mediated by P2Y1 and P2X7 receptors to develop novel approaches for treatments of epilepsy and MS at very early stages.Entities:
Keywords: P2X7; P2Y1; astroglia; disease; intercellular interaction; neuroinflammation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35586058 PMCID: PMC9109958 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.900337
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
Examples of astrocyte P2Y1R- and P2X7R-mediated signalling in epilepsy and MS, respectively. Properties of astrocyte P2Rs-mediated signalling and effects of their blocking on pathophysiological events are showed for both diseases.
| Astrocyte P2Y1R in Epilepsy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preparation/Model | P2Y1R signaling | P2Y1R block | Effect on neurons | Reference |
| epileptiform slices | ↑P2Y1R | MRS 2179 MRS 2365 | Prevention of abnormal synaptic frequency increase |
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| ↑Glutamate release | ||||
| hippocampal slices/kindling epilepsy model | ↑P2Y1R | MRS2179 | Reversing of abnormal synaptic activity |
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| ↑Ca2+ signals | ||||
| ↑Glutamate release | ||||
| hippocampal slices/TLE model | ↑P2Y1R | MRS 2179 | Restoring of normal glutamatergic synaptic activity |
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| ↑Ca2 signals | ||||
| ↑Glutamate release | ||||
| hippocampal slices/kindling epilepsy model | ↑P2Y1R | MRS2179 | Rescuing of impaired synaptic plasticity |
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| ↑Ca2+ signals | ||||
| ↑Glutamate release | ||||
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| brain sections/EAE | P2X7R null mice | P2X7R deficient | Reduction of GFAP expression |
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| Suppression of EAE development | ||||
| Reduction of axonal damage | ||||
| brain sections/EAE | ↑P2X7 expression | Brilliant blue G | Reduction of astrogliosis |
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| Decrease of GFAP and S100β levels | ||||
| Alleviating of disease symptoms | ||||
| brain sections/MS patients | ↑P2X7 expression | Not studied | Astrogliosis near cortical lesions |
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| Astrocyte culture/EAE (isolated CNS-infiltrated immune cells) | ↑Ca2 signals | PPADS A438079 | Blocking interaction of astrocytes and CNS-infiltrated immune cells |
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FIGURE 1Purinergic signalling between astrocytes, neurons, microglia and CNS-infiltrated immune cell in epilepsy and multiple sclerosis. The ATP release and the involvement of the specific astrocytic purinergic receptor (PR) type is depicted for the diseases. Activation of astrocytic P2Y1R and P2X7R induce the rise in intracellular Ca2+. Activation of P2Y1R promotes the release of glutamate, which acts on the presynaptic and postsynaptic glutamate receptors (NMDAR and mGluR). Activation of P2X7Rs is mediated by the release of ATP through connexin-43 hemichannels and/or pannexin-1 channels. Integrins are depicted as a putative link to the astrocytic P2X7R activation via connexin-43/pannexin-1-derived ATP.