3 resultados para CX3CR1 phagocytes
em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland
Resumo:
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammation which affects the gastrointestinal tract (GIT). One of the best ways to study the immunological mechanisms involved during the disease is the T cell transfer model of colitis. In this model, immunodeficient mice (RAG-/-recipients) are reconstituted with naive CD4+ T cells from healthy wild type hosts. This model allows examination of the earliest immunological events leading to disease and chronic inflammation, when the gut inflammation perpetuates but does not depend on a defined antigen. To study the potential role of antigen presenting cells (APCs) in the disease process, it is helpful to have an antigen-driven disease model, in which a defined commensal-derived antigen leads to colitis. An antigen driven-colitis model has hence been developed. In this model OT-II CD4+ T cells, that can recognize only specific epitopes in the OVA protein, are transferred into RAG-/- hosts challenged with CFP-OVA-expressing E. coli. This model allows the examination of interactions between APCs and T cells in the lamina propria.
Resumo:
Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a degenerative disease leading to photoreceptor cell loss. Mouse models of RP, such as the rd10 mouse (B6.CXBl-Pde6brd10/J), have enhanced our understanding of the disease, allowing for development of potential therapeutics. In 2011, our group first demonstrated that the synthetic progesterone analogue ‘Norgestrel’ is neuroprotective in two mouse models of retinal degeneration, including the rd10 mouse. We have since elucidated several mechanisms by which Norgestrel protects stressed photoreceptors, such as upregulating growth factors. This study consequently aimed to further characterize Norgestrel’s neuroprotective effects. Specifically, we sought to investigate the role that microglia might play; for microglial-derived inflammation has been shown to potentiate neurodegeneration. Dams of post-natal day (P) 10 rd10 pups were given a Norgestrel-supplemented diet (80mg/kg). Upon weaning, pups remained on Norgestrel. Tissue was harvested from P15-P50 rd10 mice on control or Norgestrel-supplemented diet. Norgestrel-diet administration provided significant retinal protection out to P40 in rd10 mice. Alterations in microglial activity coincided with significant protection, implicating microglial changes in Norgestrel-induced neuroprotection. Utilizing primary cultures of retinal microglia and 661W photoreceptor-like cells, we show that rd10 microglia drive neuronal cell death. We reveal a novel role of Norgestrel, acting directly on microglia to reduce pro-inflammatory activation and prevent neuronal cell death. Norgestrel effectively suppresses cytokine, chemokine and danger-associated molecular pattern molecule (DAMP) expression in the rd10 retina. Remarkably, Norgestrel upregulates fractalkine-CX3CR1 signaling 1 000-fold at the RNA level, in the rd10 mouse. Fractalkine-CX3CR1 signaling has been shown to protect neurons by regulating retinal microglial activation and migration. Ultimately, these results present Norgestrel as a promising treatment for RP, with dual actions as a neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory agent in the retina.
Resumo:
Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) is the name given to a group of hereditary diseases causing progressive and degenerative blindness. RP affects over 1 in 4000 individuals, making it the most prevalent inherited retinal disease worldwide, yet currently there is no cure. In 2011, our group released a paper detailing the protective effects of the synthetic progestin ‘Norgestrel’. A common component of the female oral contraceptive pill, Norgestrel was shown to protect against retinal cell death in two distinct mouse models of retinal degeneration: in the Balb/c light damage model and the Pde6brd10 (rd10) model. Little was known of the molecular workings of this compound however and thus this study aimed to elucidate the protective manner in which Norgestrel worked. To this aim, the 661W cone photoreceptor-like cell line and ex vivo retinal explanting was utilised. We found that Norgestrel induces a increase in neuroprotective basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) with subsequent downstream actions on the inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase 3β. Progesterone receptor expression was subsequently characterised in the C57 and rd10 retinas and in the 661W cell line. Norgestrel caused nuclear trafficking of progesterone receptor membrane complex one (PGRMC1) in 661W cells and thus Norgestrel was hypothesised to work primarily through the actions of PGRMC1. This trafficking was shown to be responsible for the critical upregulation of bFGF and PGRMC1- Norgestrel binding was proven to cause a neuroprotective bFGF-mediated increase in intracellular calcium. The protective properties of Norgestrel were further studied in the rd10 mouse model of retinitis pigmentosa. Using non-invasive diet supplementation (80mg/kg), we showed that Norgestrel gave significant retinal protection out to postnatal day 40 (P40). Overactive microglia have previously been shown to potentiate photoreceptor cell loss in the degenerating rd10 retina and thus we focussed on Norgestrel-mediated changes in photoreceptor-microglial crosstalk. Norgestrel acted to dampen pro-inflammatory microglial cell reactivity, decreasing chemokine (MCP1, MCP3, MIP-1α, MIP-1β) and subsequent damaging cytokine (TNFα, Il-1β) production. Critically, Norgestrel up-regulated photoreceptor-microglial, fractalkine-CX3CR1 signalling 1000-fold in the P20 rd10 mouse. Known to prevent microglial activation, we hypothesise that Norgestrel acts as a vital anti-inflammatory in the diseased retina, driving fractalkine-CX3CR1 signalling to delay retinal degeneration. This study stands to highlight some of the neuroprotective mechanisms utilised by Norgestrel in the prevention of photoreceptor cell death. We identify for the first time, not only a pro-survival pathway activated directly in photoreceptor cells, but also a Norgestreldriven mediation of an otherwise damaging microglial cell response. All taken, these results form the beginning of a case to bring Norgestrel to clinical trials, as a potential therapeutic for the treatment of RP.