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Tolerogenic effect of fiber tract injury: reduced EAE severity following entorhinal cortex lesion
Authors:Leman Mutlu  Christine Brandt  Erik Kwidzinski  Birgit Sawitzki  Ulrike Gimsa  Jacqueline Mahlo  Orhan Aktas  Robert Nitsch  Marloes van Zwam  Jon D. Laman  Ingo Bechmann
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Cell Biology and Neurobiology, Charité, 10098 Berlin, Germany;(2) Institute of Immunology, Charité, 10098 Berlin, Germany;(3) Institute of Neuroimmunology, Charité, 10098 Berlin, Germany;(4) Department of Neurology, University of Rostock, 18055 Rostock, Germany;(5) Department of Immunology, Erasmus MC, 3000 DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:
Despite transient, myelin-directed adaptive immune responses in regions of fiber tract degeneration, none of the current models of fiber tract injuries evokes disseminated demyelination, implying effective mechanisms maintaining or re-establishing immune tolerance. In fact, we have recently detected CD95L upregulation accompanied by apoptosis of leukocytes in zones of axonal degeneration induced by entorhinal cortex lesion (ECL), a model of layer-specific axonal degeneration. Moreover, infiltrating monocytes readily transformed into ramified microglia exhibiting a phenotype of immature (CD86+/CD80−) antigen-presenting cells. We now report the appearance of the axonal antigen neurofilament-light along with increased T cell apoptosis and enhanced expression of the pro-apoptotic gene Bad in cervical lymph nodes after ECL. In order to test the functional significance of such local and systemic depletory/regulatory mechanisms on subsequent immunity to central nervous system antigens, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis was induced by proteolipid protein immunization 30 days after ECL. In three independent experiments, we found significantly diminished disease scores and infiltrates in lesioned compared to sham-operated SJL mice. This is consistent with a previous meta-statistical analysis (Goodin et al. in Neurology 52:1737–1745, 1999) rejecting the O-hypothesis that brain trauma causes or exacerbates multiple sclerosis. Conversely, brain injuries may involve long-term tolerogenic effects towards brain antigens. Leman Mutlu, Christine Brandt, Jon D. Laman, and Ingo Bechmann have contributed equally.
Keywords:Wallerian (axonal) degeneration  EAE  Immune tolerance  Autoimmunity
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