Interaction between systemic inflammation and brain inflammation in chronic neurodegeneration
Interaction between systemic inflammation and brain inflammation in chronic neurodegeneration
Systemic inflammation, evoked by an infection or injury leads to the production of inflammatory mediators that communicate with the brain. This communication route involves further synthesis of inflammatory mediators in the brain, and this leads in turn to changes in metabolism and behaviour. There is evidence to show that resident cells of mononuclear phagocyte lineage are key players in this process. In an animal model of chronic neurodegeneration, murine prion disease, we have shown that there is an atypical inflammatory response dominated by the presence of activated perivascular macrophages and microglia. These cells synthesise minimal levels of proinflammatory cytokines. However, following asystemic inflammatory challenge mice with prion disease were challenged with endotoxin (LPS) or poly IC to mimic a systemic bacterial or viral infection. Following challenge, the mice with prion disease showed exaggerated sickness behaviour. This exaggerated sickness behaviour was associated with a dramatic switch in the cytokine profile in the brain from an anti-inflammatory to a proinflammatory profile. This switch in cytokine profile was also accompanied by an increase in the number of neurons undergoing apoptosis in the brains of animals with prion disease. These data lead to the hypothesis that systemic inflammation may affect both symptoms of chronic neurodegenerative disease and disease progression. Ongoing clinical studies in patients with Alzheimer’s disease support this hypothesis.
141-142
Perry, V.H.
8f29d36a-8e1f-4082-8700-09483bbaeae4
Cunningham, C.
6d675038-a4b1-46e2-9e4b-0a5ac27ea2b2
Holmes, C.
ada5abf3-8459-4cf7-be40-3f4e9391cc96
March 2006
Perry, V.H.
8f29d36a-8e1f-4082-8700-09483bbaeae4
Cunningham, C.
6d675038-a4b1-46e2-9e4b-0a5ac27ea2b2
Holmes, C.
ada5abf3-8459-4cf7-be40-3f4e9391cc96
Abstract
Systemic inflammation, evoked by an infection or injury leads to the production of inflammatory mediators that communicate with the brain. This communication route involves further synthesis of inflammatory mediators in the brain, and this leads in turn to changes in metabolism and behaviour. There is evidence to show that resident cells of mononuclear phagocyte lineage are key players in this process. In an animal model of chronic neurodegeneration, murine prion disease, we have shown that there is an atypical inflammatory response dominated by the presence of activated perivascular macrophages and microglia. These cells synthesise minimal levels of proinflammatory cytokines. However, following asystemic inflammatory challenge mice with prion disease were challenged with endotoxin (LPS) or poly IC to mimic a systemic bacterial or viral infection. Following challenge, the mice with prion disease showed exaggerated sickness behaviour. This exaggerated sickness behaviour was associated with a dramatic switch in the cytokine profile in the brain from an anti-inflammatory to a proinflammatory profile. This switch in cytokine profile was also accompanied by an increase in the number of neurons undergoing apoptosis in the brains of animals with prion disease. These data lead to the hypothesis that systemic inflammation may affect both symptoms of chronic neurodegenerative disease and disease progression. Ongoing clinical studies in patients with Alzheimer’s disease support this hypothesis.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
Published date: March 2006
Additional Information:
Colloquium C016: The Mystery of the Relapse in MS
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 62538
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/62538
ISSN: 0022-3042
PURE UUID: fab93f3a-8ab3-46fb-98e7-66355402ba66
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 12 Mar 2009
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:07
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
C. Cunningham
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics