262 resultados para brain cell karyotype
Resumo:
The incidence of neurodegenerative disease like Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease (AD) increases dramatically with age; only a small percentage is directly related to familial forms. The etiology of the most abundant, sporadic forms is complex and multifactorial, involving both genetic and environmental factors. Several environmental pollutants have been associated with neurodegenerative disorders. The present article focuses on results obtained in experimental neurotoxicology studies that indicate a potential pathogenic role of lead and mercury in the development of neurodegenerative diseases. Both heavy metals have been shown to interfere with a multitude of intracellular targets, thereby contributing to several pathogenic processes typical of neurodegenerative disorders, including mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, deregulation of protein turnover, and brain inflammation. Exposure to heavy metals early in development can precondition the brain for developing a neurodegenerative disease later in life. Alternatively, heavy metals can exert their adverse effects through acute neurotoxicity or through slow accumulation during prolonged periods of life. The pro-oxidant effects of heavy metals can exacerbate the age-related increase in oxidative stress that is related to the decline of the antioxidant defense systems. Brain inflammatory reactions also generate oxidative stress. Chronic inflammation can contribute to the formation of the senile plaques that are typical for AD. In accord with this view, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and antioxidants suppress early pathogenic processes leading to Alzheimer's disease, thus decreasing the risk of developing the disease. The effects of lead and mercury were also tested in aggregating brain-cell cultures of fetal rat telencephalon, a three-dimensional brain-cell culture system. The continuous application for 10 to 50 days of non-cytotoxic concentrations of heavy metals resulted in their accumulation in brain cells and the occurrence of delayed toxic effects. When applied at non-toxic concentrations, methylmercury, the most common environmental form of mercury, becomes neurotoxic under pro-oxidant conditions. Furthermore, lead and mercury induce glial cell reactivity, a hallmark of brain inflammation. Both mercury and lead increase the expression of the amyloid precursor protein; mercury also stimulates the formation of insoluble beta-amyloid, which plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of AD and causes oxidative stress and neurotoxicity in vitro. Taken together, a considerable body of evidence suggests that the heavy metals lead and mercury contribute to the etiology of neurodegenerative diseases and emphasizes the importance of taking preventive measures in this regard.
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AGAT and GAMT, the two enzymes of the creatine synthesis pathway, are well expressed within CNS, suggesting autonomous brain creatine synthesis. This contradicts SLC6A8 deficiency, which causes creatine deficiency despite CNS expression of AGAT and GAMT. We hypothesized that AGAT and GAMT were not co-expressed by brain cells, and that guanidinoacetate must be transported between cells to allow creatine synthesis. We finely analyzed the cell-to-cell co-expression of AGAT, GAMT and SLC6A8 in various regions of rat CNS, and showed that in most structures, cells co-expressing AGAT+GAMT (equipped for autonomous creatine synthesis) were in low proportions (<20%). Using reaggregating brain cell cultures, we also showed that brain cells take up guanidinoacetate and convert it to creatine. Guanidinoacetate uptake was competed by creatine. This suggests that in most brain regions, guanidinoacetate is transported from AGAT- to GAMT-expressing cells through SLC6A8 to allow creatine synthesis, thereby explaining creatine deficiency in SLC6A8-deficient CNS.
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Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) exists in both high- and low-molecular mass isoforms, each of which has a tubulin-binding domain consisting of 3 imperfect tandem repeats of 31 amino acids containing a more highly conserved 18 amino acid 'core' sequence. We describe here a novel form of low molecular mass MAP2 (MAP2c) that contains an additional 4th repeat of this tubulin-binding motif. Like the 3 previously known repeat sequences, this 4th copy is highly conserved between MAP2 and the two other known members of the same gene family, tau and MAP4. In each of these three genes the additional 4th repeat is inserted between the 1st and 2nd repeats of the 3-repeat form of the molecule. Experiments with brain cell cultures, in which the relative proportions of neurons and glia had been manipulated by drug treatment, showed that 4-repeat MAP2c is associated with glial cells whereas 3-repeat MAP2c is expressed in neurons. Whereas 3-repeat MAP2c is expressed early in development and then declines, the level of 4-repeat MAP2c increases later in development, corresponding to the relatively late differentiation of glial cells compared to neurons. When transfected into non-neuronal cells, the 4-repeat version of MAP2c behaved indistinguishably from the 3-repeat form in stabilising and rearranging cellular microtubules. The presence of an additional 4th repeat of the tubulin-binding motif in all three members of the MAP2 gene family suggests that this variant arose prior to their differentiation from an ancestral gene.
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The nervous system is a frequent target of industrial chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and environmental pollutants. To screen large numbers of compounds for their neurotoxic potential, in vitro systems are required which combine organ-specific traits with robustness and high reproducibility. These requirements are met by serum-free aggregating brain cell cultures derived from mechanically dissociated embryonic rat brain. The initial cell suspension, composed of neural stem cells, neural progenitor cells, immature postmitotic neurons, glioblasts, and microglial cells, is kept under continuous gyratory agitation. Spherical aggregates form spontaneously and are maintained in suspension culture for several weeks. Within the aggregates, the cells rearrange and mature, reproducing critical morphogenic events such as migration, proliferation, differentiation, synaptogenesis, and myelination. In addition to the spontaneous reconstitution of histotypic brain architecture, the cultures acquire organ-specific functionality as indicated by activity-dependent glucose consumption, spontaneous electrical activity, and brain-specific inflammatory responses. These three-dimensional primary cell cultures offer therefore a unique model for neurotoxicity testing both during development and at advanced cellular differentiation. The high number of aggregates available and the excellent reproducibility of the cultures facilitate routine test procedures. This chapter presents a detailed description of the preparation and maintenance of these cultures as well as their use for routine toxicity testing.
Resumo:
Microglial cells react early to a neurotoxic insult. However, the bioactive factors and the cell-cell interactions leading to microglial activation and finally to a neuroprotective or neurodegenerative outcome remain to be elucidated. Therefore, we analyzed the microglial reaction induced by methylmercury (MeHgCl) using cell cultures of different complexity. Isolated microglia were found to be directly activated by MeHgCl (10(-10) to 10(-6) M), as indicated by process retraction, enhanced lectin staining, and cluster formation. An association of MeHgCl-induced microglial clusters with astrocytes and neurons was observed in three-dimensional cultures. Close proximity was found between the clusters of lectin-stained microglia and astrocytes immunostained for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), which may facilitate interactions between astrocytes and reactive microglia. In contrast, immunoreactivity for microtubule-associated protein (MAP-2), a neuronal marker, was absent in the vicinity of the microglial clusters. Interactions between astrocytes and microglia were studied in cocultures treated for 10 days with MeHgCl. Interleukin-6 release was increased at 10(-7) M of MeHgCl, whereas it was decreased when each of these two cell types was cultured separately. Moreover, addition of IL-6 to three-dimensional brain cell cultures treated with 3 x 10(-7) M of MeHgCl prevented the decrease in immunostaining of the neuronal markers MAP-2 and neurofilament-M. IL-6 administered to three-dimensional cultures in the absence of MeHgCl caused astrogliosis, as indicated by increased GFAP immunoreactivity. Altogether, these results show that microglial cells are directly activated by MeHgCl and that the interaction between activated microglia and astrocytes can increase local IL-6 release, which may cause astrocyte reactivity and neuroprotection.
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The objective of the EU funded integrated project "ACuteTox" is to develop a strategy in which general cytotoxicity, together with organ-specific endpoints and biokinetic features, are taken into consideration in the in vitro prediction of oral acute systemic toxicity. With regard to the nervous system, the effects of 23 reference chemicals were tested with approximately 50 endpoints, using a neuronal cell line, primary neuronal cell cultures, brain slices and aggregated brain cell cultures. Comparison of the in vitro neurotoxicity data with general cytotoxicity data generated in a non-neuronal cell line and with in vivo data such as acute human lethal blood concentration, revealed that GABA(A) receptor function, acetylcholine esterase activity, cell membrane potential, glucose uptake, total RNA expression and altered gene expression of NF-H, GFAP, MBP, HSP32 and caspase-3 were the best endpoints to use for further testing with 36 additional chemicals. The results of the second analysis showed that no single neuronal endpoint could give a perfect improvement in the in vitro-in vivo correlation, indicating that several specific endpoints need to be analysed and combined with biokinetic data to obtain the best correlation with in vivo acute toxicity.
Resumo:
Hyperammonemia in neonates and infants affects brain development and causes mental retardation. We report that ammonium impaired cholinergic axonal growth and altered localization and phosphorylation of intermediate neurofilament protein in rat reaggregated brain cell primary cultures. This effect was restricted to the phase of early maturation but did not occur after synaptogenesis. Exposure to NH4Cl decreased intracellular creatine, phosphocreatine, and ADP. We demonstrate that creatine cotreatment protected axons from ammonium toxic effects, although this did not restore high-energy phosphates. The protection by creatine was glial cell-dependent. Our findings suggest that the means to efficiently sustain CNS creatine concentration in hyperammonemic neonates and infants should be assessed to prevent impairment of axonogenesis and irreversible brain damage.
Resumo:
Neuroinflammation is observed in many brain pathologies: in neurodegenerative diseases and multiple sclerosis as well as in chemically induced lesions. It is characterized by the reactivity of microglial cells and astrocytes, activation of inducible NO-synthase (i-NOS), and increased expression and/or release of cytokines and chemokines. Clearly, cell-to-cell signaling between the different brain cell types plays an important role in the initiation and propagation of neuroinflammation, but despite the growing list of known molecular actors, the underlying pathways and the sequence of events remain to be fully elucidated. The present chapter presents an example of how to assess neuroinflammation in complex brain tissues, using aggregating brain cell cultures as an in vitro model. This three-dimensional cell culture system provides optimal cell-to-cell interactions crucial for histotypic cellular maturation and control of neuroinflammatory processes. The techniques described here comprise immunocytochemistry to assess the reactivity of microglia and astrocytes and the expression of cytokines; quantitative RT-PCR to measure the mRNA expression of cytokines (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-1ra, TGF-β, IL-15, IFN-γ), chemokines (ccl5, cxcl1, cxcl2), and i-NOS; and immunoblotting to assess MAP kinase pathway activation (phosphorylation of p38 and p44/42 MAP kinases).
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Signals detected with functional brain imaging techniques are based on the coupling of neuronal activity with energy metabolism. Techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allow the visualization of brain areas that are activated by a variety of sensory, motor or cognitive tasks. Despite the technological sophistication of these brain imaging techniques, the precise mechanisms and cell types involved in coupling and in generating metabolic signals are still debated. Recent experimental data on the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie the fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) - based PET imaging point to a critical role of a particular brain cell type, the astrocytes, in coupling neuronal activity to glucose utilization. Indeed, astrocytes possess receptors and re-uptake sites for a variety of neurotransmitters, including glutamate, the predominant excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain, In addition, astrocytic end-feet, which surround capillaries, are enriched in the specific glucose transporter GLUT-1. These features allow astrocytes to "sense" synaptic activity and to couple it with energy metabolism. In vivo and in vitro data support the following functional model: in response to glutamate released by active neurons, glucose is predominantly taken up by astrocytic end-feet; glucose is then metabolized to lactate which provides a preferred energy substrate for neurons. These data support the notion that astrocytes markedly contribute to the FDG-PET signal.
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RÉSUMÉ La sclérose en plaques (SEP) est une maladie démyélinisante du système nerveux central (SNC) qui touche le plus souvent de jeunes femmes. Bien qu'elle ait été décrite pour la première fois il y a plus de 200 ans, son étiologie n'est pas encore complètement comprise. Contrairement à d'autres maladies purement génétiques, l'épidémiologie de la SEP ne peut être que partiellement expliquée par des facteurs génétiques. Ceci suggère que des facteurs environnementaux pourraient être impliqués dans la pathogenèse de la SEP. Parmi ceux-ci, le virus d'Epstein-Barr (EBV) est un excellent candidat, comme cela a été démontré par de larges études séroépidémiologiques ainsi que pax l'évaluation de la réponse cellulaire dans le sang. Bien que le SNC soit en fait la cible des réponses immunitaires anormales dans la SEP, peu d'études ont été accomplies sur les réponses immunitaires spécifiques à EBV dans ce compartiment. Ceci est particulièrement vrai chez des patients vivants chez lesquels des biopsies sont rarement effectuées, ainsi que pour les réponses cellulaires car très peu de cellules immunitaires peuvent être obtenues du SNC. Nous avons donc développé des conditions de cultures et un readout nous permettant d'étudier le nombre réduit de cellules disponibles dans le liquide céphalo-rachidien (LCR), qui représente le seul matériel pouvant être obtenu du SNC de patients SEP vivants. Nous avons trouvé que les réponses cellulaires et humorales spécifiques à EBV étaient augmentées dans le LCR des patients SEP comparé à du sang pairé, ainsi que par rapport à des patients avec d'autres maladies neurologiques inflammatoires et noninflammatoires. Afin de déterminer si les réponses immunitaires augmentées contre EBV étaient spécifiques à ce virus ou si elles reflétaient simplement une hyperactivation immunitaire aspécifique, nous avons comparé les réponses spécifiques à EBV avec celles spécifiques au cytomegalovirus (CNN). En effet, comme EBV, CNN est un herpesvirus neurotropique qui peut établir des infections latentes, mais ce dernier n'est pas considéré comme étant associé à la SEP. De façon intéressante, les réponses immunitaires spécifiques à CNN trouvées dans le LCR étaient plus basses que dans le sang, et ceci dans toutes les catégories de patients. Ces données suggèrent qu'une réactivation d'EBV pourrait avoir lieu dans le SNC des patients SEP à un stade précoce de la maladie et renforcent fortement l'hypothèse qu'EBV pourrait avoir un rôle déclencheur dans cette maladie. Ainsi, il pourrait être intéressant d'explorer si un traitement ou un vaccin efficace contre EBV peut prévenir le développement de la SEP. On ne connaît toujours pas la raison pour laquelle les réponses immunitaires spécifiques à EBV sont augmentées chez les patients SEP. Une hypothèse est que la réponse immunitaire est qualitativement différente chez les patients SEP par rapports aux contrôles. Pour examiner ceci, nous avons évalué le profile cytokinique de lymphocytes T CD4+ et CD8+ stimulés par EBV, mais nous n'avons pas pu mettre en évidence de différence remarquable entre patients SEP et sujets sains. Cette question reste donc ouverte et d'autres études sont justifiées. Il n'existe pas de marqueur fiable de la SEP. Ici, nous avons trouvé que la cytokine IL-26, récemment décrite, était augmentée dans les lymphocytes T CD8+ des patients avec une SEP secondairement progressive comparé à des patients SEP en poussée, des patients avec une SEP primairement progressive, des patients avec d'autres maladies neurologiques inflammatoires, ou des sujets sains. De plus, nous avons identifié des types de cellules dérivées du cerveau (astrocytes, oligodendrocytes et neurones) qui exprimaient le récepteur de l'IL-26. Ceci ouvre la voie à d'autres études afin de mieux comprendre la fonction de l'II.-26 et son interaction avec la. SEP. SUMMARY : Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease affecting the central nervous system (CNS), mostly in young female adults. Although it was first described 200 years ago, its etiology is still not completely understood. Contrary to other purely genetic diseases, genetics can explain only part of MS epidemiology. Therefore, environmental factors that might be involved in MS pathogenesis were searched for. Among them, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a strong potential candidate, such as shown by large seroepidemiological studies and cellular immune response assessments in the blood. Although the CNS is the actual target of abnormal immune responses in MS, few studies have been performed on EBV-specific immune responses in this compartment. This is particularly true for live patients, from which biopsy material is almost never available, and for cellular immune responses, since very few immune cells are available from the CNS. We therefore developed culture conditions and a readout that were compatible with the study of the reduced number of cells found in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), the only readily available material from the CNS of live ' MS patients. We found that EBV-specific cellular and humoral immune responses were increased in the CSF of MS patients as compared with paired blood, as well as compared with the CSF of patients with other inflammatory and non-inflammatory neurological diseases. To determine whether the enhanced immune responses against EBV were specific of this virus or simply reflected an aspecific immune hyperactivation, we compared the EBV- with the cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific immune responses. Indeed, like EBV, CMV is a neurotrophic herpesvirus that can establish latent infections, but the latter is not considered to be associated with MS. Interestingly, CSF CMV-specific immune responses were lower than blood ones and this, in all patient categories. These findings suggest that EBV reactivation may be taking place in the CNS of patients at the early stages of MS and strengthen the hypothesis that EBV may have a triggering role in this disease. Therefore, it might be interesting to explore whether an efficient anti-EBV drug or vaccine is able to prevent MS development. The reason why EBV-specific immune responses are increased in MS patients is still missing. One hypothesis might be that the immune response against EBV is qualitatively different in MS patients as compared with controls. To examine this, we assessed the cytokine mRNA profile of EBV-stimulated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, but could not find any remarkable difference between MS patients and healthy controls. Therefore, this question remains open and fiirther studies are warranted. Reliable disease markers are lacking for MS. Here, we found that the recently described cytokine IL-26 was increased in CD8+ T cells of patients with secondary progressive MS as compared with relapsing MS, primary progressive MS, other inflammatory neurological diseases and healthy controls. Moreover, we identified brain cell types (astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and neurons) that expressed the IL-26 receptor, paring the way for further studies to understand IL-26 function and its interaction with MS.
Resumo:
An in vitro model, the aggregating brain cell culture of fetal rat telencephalon, has been used to investigate the influence of glial cells on the neurotoxicity of two organophosphorus pesticides (OPs), chlorpyrifos and parathion. Mixed-cell aggregate cultures were treated continuously for 10 days between DIV 5 and 15. Parathion induced astrogliosis at concentration at which MAP-2 immunostaining, found here to be more sensitive than neuron-specific enzyme activities, was not affected. In contrast, chlorpyrifos induced a comparatively weak gliotic reaction, and only at concentrations at which neurons were already affected. After similar treatments, increased neurotoxicity of parathion and chlorpyrifos was found in aggregate cultures deprived of glial cells. These results suggest that glial cells provide neuroprotection against OPs toxicity. To address the question of the difference in toxicity between parathion and chlorpyrifos, the toxic effects of their leaving groups, p-nitrophenol and trichloropyridinol, were studied in mixed-cell aggregates. General cytotoxicity was more pronounced for trichloropyridinol and both compounds had similar toxic effects on neuron-specific enzyme activities. In contrast, trichloropyridinol induced a much stronger decrease in glutamine synthetase activity, the enzymatic marker of astrocytes. Trichloropyridinol may exert a toxic effect on astrocytes, compromising their neuroprotective function, thus exacerbating the neurotoxicity of chlorpyrifos. This is in line with the suggestion that glial cells may contribute to OPs neurotoxicity, and with the view that OPs may exert their neurotoxic effects through different mechanisms.
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Only a small percentage of neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease is directly related to familial forms. The etiology of the most abundant, sporadic forms seems to involve both genetic and environmental factors. Environmental compounds are now extensively studied for their possible contribution to neurodegeneration. Chemicals were found which were able to reproduce symptoms of known neurodegenerative diseases, others may either predispose to the onset of neurodegeneration, or exacerbate distinct pathogenic processes of these diseases. In any case, in vitro studies performed with models presenting various degrees of complexity have shown that many environmental compounds have the potential to cause neurodegeneration, through a variety of pathways similar to those described in neurodegenerative diseases. Since the population is exposed to a huge number of potentially neurotoxic compounds, there is an important need for rapid and efficient procedures for hazard evaluation. Xenobiotics elicit a cascade of reactions that, most of the time, involve numerous interactions between the different brain cell types. A reliable in vitro model for the detection of environmental toxins potentially at risk for neurodegenerative diseases should therefore allow maximal cell-cell interactions and multiparametric endpoints determination. The combined use of in vitro models and new analytical approaches using "omics" technologies should help to map toxicity pathways, and advance our understanding of the possible role of xenobiotics in the etiology of neurodegenerative diseases.
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The involvement of voltage-gated calcium channels in the survival of immature CNS neurons was studied in aggregating brain cell cultures by examining cell type-specific effects of various channel blockers. Nifedipine (10 microM), a specific blocker of L-type calcium channels, caused a pronounced and irreversible decrease of glutamic acid decarboxylase activity, whereas the activity of choline acetyltransferase was significantly less affected. Flunarizine (1-10 microM, a relatively unspecific ion channel blocker) elicited similar effects, that were attenuated by NMDA. The glia-specific marker enzymes, glutamine synthetase and 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphohydrolase, were affected only after treatment with high concentrations of nifedipine (50 microM) or NiCl2 (100 microM, shown to block T-type calcium channels). Nifedipine (50 microM), NiCl2 (100 microM), and flunarizine (5 microM) also caused a significant increase in the soluble nucleosome concentration, indicating increased apoptotic cell death. This effect was prevented by cycloheximide (1 microM). Furthermore, the combined treatment with calcicludine (10 nM, blocking L-type calcium channels) and funnel-web spider toxin-3.3 (100 nM, blocking T-type channels) also caused a significant increase in free nucleosomes as well as a decrease in glutamic acid decarboxylase activity. In contrast, cell viability was not affected by peptide blockers specific for N-, P-, and/or Q-type calcium channels. Highly differentiated cultures showed diminished susceptibility to nifedipine and flunarizine. The present data suggest that the survival of immature neurons, and particularly that of immature GABAergic neurons, requires the sustained entry of Ca2+ through voltage-gated calcium channels.
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Gene duplication was prevalent during hominoid evolution, yet little is known about the functional fate of new ape gene copies. We characterized the CDC14B cell cycle gene and the functional evolution of its hominoid-specific daughter gene, CDC14Bretro. We found that CDC14B encodes four different splice isoforms that show different subcellular localizations (nucleus or microtubule-associated) and functional properties. A microtubular CDC14B variant spawned CDC14Bretro through retroposition in the hominoid ancestor 18-25 million years ago (Mya). CDC14Bretro evolved brain-/testis-specific expression after the duplication event and experienced a short period of intense positive selection in the African ape ancestor 7-12 Mya. Using resurrected ancestral protein variants, we demonstrate that by virtue of amino acid substitutions in distinct protein regions during this time, the subcellular localization of CDC14Bretro progressively shifted from the association with microtubules (stabilizing them) to an association with the endoplasmic reticulum. CDC14Bretro evolution represents a paradigm example of rapid, selectively driven subcellular relocalization, thus revealing a novel mode for the emergence of new gene function