星形胶质细胞
胶质纤维酸性蛋白
生物
NKG2D公司
先天免疫系统
神经元
免疫系统
免疫学
细胞生物学
神经科学
细胞毒性T细胞
中枢神经系统
免疫组织化学
生物化学
体外
作者
Peter J. Darlington,Cornelia Podjaski,Katherine E Horn,Santiago Costantino,Manon Blain,Philippe Saikali,Zhihong Chen,Kenneth Adam Baker,Jia Newcombe,Mark S. Freedman,Paul W. Wiseman,Amit Bar‐Or,Timothy E. Kennedy,Jack P. Antel
标识
DOI:10.1097/nen.0b013e3181772cf6
摘要
Neuronal injury and loss are recognized features of neuroinflammatory disorders, including acute and chronic encephalitides and multiple sclerosis; destruction of astrocytes has been demonstrated in cases of Rasmussen encephalitis. Here, we show that innate immune cells (i.e. natural killer [NK] and γδ T cells) cause loss of neurons from primary human neuron-enriched cultures by destroying the supporting astrocytes. Interleukin 2-activated NK cells caused loss of astrocytes within 1 hour, whereas neurons were lost at 4 hours. Time-lapse imaging indicated that delayed neuron loss was due to early destruction of supporting astrocytes. Selective blocking of astrocyte death with anti-NKG2D antibodies reduced neuron loss, as did blocking of CD54 on astrocytes. γδ T cells also induced astrocyte cytotoxicity, leading to subsequent neuronal displacement. In astrocytes, NK cells caused caspase-dependent fragmentation of the intermediate filament proteins glial fibrillary acidic protein and vimentin, whereas anti-CD3-activated T cells produced fragmentation to a lesser extent and without measurable cytotoxicity. Glial fibrillary acidic protein fragmentation was also demonstrated in lysates from chronic multiple sclerosis plaques but not from normal control white matter. These data suggest that non-major histocompatibility complex-restricted immune effector cells may contribute to neuron loss in neuroinflammatory disorders indirectly through injury of glia.
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