Impaired inflammatory response to glial cell death in genetically metallothionein-I- and -II-deficient mice

被引:50
作者
Penkowa, M
Giralt, M
Moos, T
Thomsen, PS
Hernández, J
Hidalgo, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Fac Ciencias, Dept Biol Celular & Fisiol, Unidad Fisiol Anim, E-08193 Barcelona, Spain
[2] Univ Copenhagen, Panum Inst, Inst Med Anat, Sect C, DK-2200 Copenhagen, Denmark
关键词
metallothionein-I; -II; and; -ILI; inflammatory response; GM-CSF; GM-CSFrec; astrocytes; microglia; 6-aminonicotinamide; zinc;
D O I
10.1006/exnr.1998.7009
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Metallothionein I+II (MT-I+II) are acute-phase proteins which are upregulated during pathological conditions in the brain. To elucidate the neuropathological importance of MT-I+II, we have examined MT-I+II-deficient mice following ip injection with 6-aminonicotinamide (6-AN). 6-AN is antimetabolic and toxic for bone marrow cells and grey matter astrocytes, In MT+/+ mice, injection with 6-AN resulted in breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and absence of GFAP-positive astrocytes in specific grey matter areas of the brain stem. Reactive astrocytosis encircled the damaged grey matter areas, which were heavily infiltrated by microglia/macrophages. The recruitment of hematogenous macrophages was accompanied by leakage of the BBB. The immunoreactivity (ir) of granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and the receptor for GM-CSF (GM-CSFrec) was significantly upregulated in astrocytes and microglia/macrophages, respectively, MT-I+IIir was also clearly increased in astrocytes surrounding the damaged areas, while that of the CNS-specific MT isoform, MT-III, was mildly increased in both astrocytes and microglial macrophages. In MT-/- mice injected with 6-AN, the BBB remained almost intact. The damage to specific grey matter areas was similar to that observed in MT+/+ mice, but reactive astrocytosis, microglia/ macrophages infiltration, and GM-CSFir and GM-CSFrecir were clearly reduced in MT-/- mice. In contrast,MT-IIIir was dramatically increased in MT-/- mice. Total zinc decreased and histochemically detect able zinc increased in the brain stem after 6-AN similarly in MT+/+ and MT-/- mice. Bone marrow myeloid monocytes and macrophages were increased as a reaction to 6-AN only in MT+/+ mice. The results demonstrate that the capability of MT-/- mice to mount a normal inflammatory response in the brain is severely attenuated, at least in part because of 6-AN-induced bone marrow affectation, involving MT-I+II for the first time as major factors during CNS tissue damage, (C) 1999 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:149 / 164
页数:16
相关论文
共 67 条
[1]  
Amat JA, 1996, GLIA, V16, P368, DOI 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1136(199604)16:4<368::AID-GLIA9>3.0.CO
[2]  
2-W
[3]   THE KINETICS AND MORPHOLOGICAL-CHARACTERISTICS OF THE MACROPHAGE MICROGLIAL RESPONSE TO KAINIC ACID-INDUCED NEURONAL DEGENERATION [J].
ANDERSSON, PB ;
PERRY, VH ;
GORDON, S .
NEUROSCIENCE, 1991, 42 (01) :201-214
[4]   THE ACUTE INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE TO LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE IN CNS PARENCHYMA DIFFERS FROM THAT IN OTHER BODY-TISSUES [J].
ANDERSSON, PB ;
PERRY, VH ;
GORDON, S .
NEUROSCIENCE, 1992, 48 (01) :169-186
[5]   EXPRESSION OF GROWTH-INHIBITORY FACTOR (GIF) IN NORMAL AND INJURED RAT BRAINS [J].
ANEZAKI, T ;
ISHIGURO, H ;
HOZUMI, I ;
INUZUKA, T ;
HIRAIWA, M ;
KOBAYASHI, H ;
YUGUCHI, T ;
WANAKA, A ;
UDA, Y ;
MIYATAKE, T ;
YAMADA, K ;
TOHYAMA, M ;
TSUJI, S .
NEUROCHEMISTRY INTERNATIONAL, 1995, 27 (01) :89-94
[6]   The functional significance of brain metallothioneins [J].
Aschner, M .
FASEB JOURNAL, 1996, 10 (10) :1129-1136
[7]  
BALASINGAM V, 1994, J NEUROSCI, V14, P846
[8]   CYTOTOXICITY OF MICROGLIA [J].
BANATI, RB ;
GEHRMANN, J ;
SCHUBERT, P ;
KREUTZBERG, GW .
GLIA, 1993, 7 (01) :111-118
[9]   Passage of cytokines across the blood-brain barrier [J].
Banks, WA ;
Kastin, AJ ;
Broadwell, RD .
NEUROIMMUNOMODULATION, 1995, 2 (04) :241-248
[10]   Effect of stress on mouse and rat brain metallothionein I and III mRNA levels [J].
Belloso, E ;
Hernandez, J ;
Giralt, M ;
Kille, P ;
Hidalgo, J .
NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 1996, 64 (06) :430-439