Bone marrow chimeric rats reveal the unique distribution of resident and recruited macrophages in the contused rat spinal cord

被引:119
作者
Popovich, PG
Hickey, WE
机构
[1] Ohio State Univ, Coll Med & Publ Hlth, Dept Mol Virol Immunol & Med Genet, Columbus, OH 43210 USA
[2] Dartmouth Med Sch, DHMC, Pathol Dept WFH, Lebanon, NH USA
关键词
macrophage; microglia; neuroinflammation; secondary injury; spinal cord injury; wound repair;
D O I
10.1093/jnen/60.7.676
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Brain and spinal cord inflammation that develops after traumatic injury is believed to differentially influence the structural and/or physiological integrity of surviving neurons and glia. It is possible that the functional dichotomy of CNS inflammation results from the activity of a heterogeneous macrophage population elicited by trauma. Indeed. unique functions have been attributed to macrophages derived from resident microglia versus those originating from infiltrating monocytes. Thus, whether progressive tissue injury or repair is favored could be explained by the disproportionate contributions of one macrophage subset relative to the other. Descriptive neuroanatomical studies are a reasonable first approach to revealing a relationship between microglia, recruited blood monocytes/macrophages, and regions of tissue degeneration and/or repair. Unfortunately, it is not possible to differentiate between CNS macrophage subsets using conventional immunohistochemical approaches. In the present study, we have used radiation bone marrow chimeric rats to definitively characterize the macrophage reaction elicited by experimental spinal contusion injury. In chimeric animals, antibodies raised against unique cell surface molecules expressed on bone marrow-derived cells (BMCs) were used to distinguish infiltrating BMCs from resident microglial-derived macrophages. Our findings indicate that the onset and plateau of macrophage activation (previously shown to be 3 and 7 days postinjury, respectively) is dominated initially by microglial-derived macrophages and then is supplanted by hematogenous cells. While resident macrophages are ubiquitously distributed throughout the injury site, leukocyte-derived monocytes exclusively infiltrate the gray matter and ro a lesser extent subpial white matter. Generally, monocyte foci in white matter remain associated with the lumen or abluminal surface of blood vessels. i.e. few cells actually infiltrate the parenchyma. If functional differences exist between CNS macrophage subsets, differences in the time-dependent accumulation and distribution of these cell types could differentially influence the survival of surrounding neurons and glia.
引用
收藏
页码:676 / 685
页数:10
相关论文
共 26 条
[21]   Spinal cord neuropathology in rat experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis: Modulation by oral administration of myelin basic protein [J].
Popovich, PG ;
Yu, JY ;
Whitacre, CC .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPATHOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1997, 56 (12) :1323-1338
[22]   RESIDENT MICROGLIA AND HEMATOGENOUS MACROPHAGES AS PHAGOCYTES IN ADOPTIVELY TRANSFERRED EXPERIMENTAL AUTOIMMUNE ENCEPHALOMYELITIS - AN INVESTIGATION USING RAT RADIATION BONE-MARROW CHIMERAS [J].
RINNER, WA ;
BAUER, J ;
SCHMIDTS, M ;
LASSMANN, H ;
HICKEY, WF .
GLIA, 1995, 14 (04) :257-266
[23]   Phagocytic response in photochemically induced infarction of rat cerebral cortex - The role of resident microglia [J].
Schroeter, M ;
Jander, S ;
Huitinga, I ;
Witte, OW ;
Stoll, G .
STROKE, 1997, 28 (02) :382-386
[24]   AN ELECTROMECHANICAL SPINAL-INJURY TECHNIQUE WITH DYNAMIC SENSITIVITY [J].
STOKES, BT ;
NOYES, DH ;
BEHRMANN, DL .
JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 1992, 9 (03) :187-195
[25]   Cytokine mRNA profiles in contused spinal cord and axotomized facial nucleus suggest a beneficial role for inflammation and gliosis [J].
Streit, WJ ;
Semple-Rowland, SL ;
Hurley, SD ;
Miller, RC ;
Popovich, PG ;
Stokes, BT .
EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1998, 152 (01) :74-87
[26]   Experimental analysis of progressive necrosis after spinal cord trauma in the rat: Etiological role of the inflammatory response [J].
Zhang, ZY ;
Krebs, CJ ;
Guth, L .
EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1997, 143 (01) :141-152