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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (
encephalomyelitis
)
13,017
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although autoreactive T-cells have a pivotal role in initiating the inflammatory process in experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) and multiple sclerosis (MS), recent evidence suggests a relevant role for autoantibodies specific for myelin proteins as well. To examine the role of B-cells in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with MS, we analyzed the V(H) gene usage in ten MS patients by PCR technologies. Analysis of HCDR3 length revealed an oligoclonal accumulation of B-cells. Sequence analysis of the V(H)3 and V(H)4 gamma transcripts of two MS individuals demonstrated that this accumulation was related to the expansion and somatic diversification of a limited groups of B-cell clones. These findings are indicative of a chronic and intense antigenic stimulation occurring in the CNS. Animal models, such as EAE, are of particular importance in order to elucidate the pathogenetic effector mechanisms in autoimmune demyelination. In a non-human primate model of EAE, we describe that the immunodominant T-cell epitope is presented exclusively by a monomorphic DRB1 allele, suggesting that susceptibility to EAE may be linked to this unique restriction and, therefore, providing a possible mechanism for MHC linkage to diseases. Moreover, we report on the presence of inflammation, sharp demyelination and
axonal
damage in EAE induced with whole myelin as well as with recombinant myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), but not with myelin basic protein alone. The presence of
axonal
pathology was supported by immunohistochemistry with anti-amyloid precursor protein and anti-non phosphorilated neurofilaments monoclonal antibodies within early active demyelinated plaques. These findings suggest that
axonal
damage may be an early event in the pathogenesis of autoimmune demyelinating diseases of the CNS and highlights the importance of animal models in which therapies targeting repair and
axonal
survival may be exploited.
...
PMID:Restricted immune responses lead to CNS demyelination and axonal damage. 1085 54
Recent magnetic resonance (MR) studies of multiple sclerosis lesions indicate that
axonal
injury is a major correlate of permanent clinical deficit. In the present study we systematically quantified acute
axonal
injury, defined by immunoreactivity for beta-amyloid-precursor-protein in dystrophic neurites, in the central nervous system of 22 multiple sclerosis patients and 18 rats with myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)-induced chronic autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE). The highest incidence of acute
axonal
injury was found during active demyelination, which was associated with
axonal
damage in periplaque and in the normal appearing white matter of actively demyelinating cases. In addition, low but significant
axonal
injury was also observed in inactive demyelinated plaques. In contrast, no significant
axonal
damage was found in remyelinated shadow plaques. The patterns of
axonal
pathology in chronic active EAE were qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those found in multiple sclerosis. Our studies confirm previous observations of
axonal
destruction in multiple sclerosis lesions during active demyelination, but also indicate that ongoing
axonal
damage in inactive lesions may significantly contribute to the clinical progression of the disease. The results further emphasize that MOG-induced EAE may serve as a suitable model for testing axon-protective therapies in inflammatory demyelinating conditions.
...
PMID:Multiple sclerosis and chronic autoimmune encephalomyelitis: a comparative quantitative study of axonal injury in active, inactive, and remyelinated lesions. 1088 Mar 96
Neuroinflammation in the course of multiple sclerosis and experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
results in demyelination and, recently demonstrated,
axonal
loss. Invading neuroantigen specific T cells are the crucial cellular elements in these processes. Here we demonstrate that invasion of activated T cells induces a massive microglial attack on myelinated axons in entorhinal-hippocampal slice cultures. Flow cytometry analysis of activation markers revealed that the activation state of invading MBP-specific T cells was significantly lower in comparison to PMA-activated T cells. Moreover, MBP-specific T cells showed a significantly lower secretion of IFN-gamma. Conversely, MBP-specific T cells displayed a significantly higher potential to trigger activation of microglial cells, i.e. upregulation of MHC class II and ICAM-1 expression, and, most importantly, microglial phagocytosis of pre-traced axons. Our data suggest that this was mediated via specific cellular interactions of T cells and microglial cells since IFN-gamma alone was not sufficient to induce
axonal
damage while such damage was apparent in response to TNF-alpha which is released by activated microglial cells. TNF-alpha secretion by both T cell populations was negligible. Thus, MBP-specific T cells which invade nervous tissue in the course of neuroinflammation are more effective in axon-damaging recruiting microglial cells than activated T cells of other specificities.
...
PMID:Axonal damage induced by invading T cells in organotypic central nervous system tissue in vitro: involvement of microglial cells. 1088 55
Infection of susceptible mice with Theiler's murine
encephalomyelitis
virus results in neurological dysfunction from progressive central nervous system demyelination that is pathologically similar to the human disease, multiple sclerosis. We hypothesized that the development of neuropathology proceeds down a final common pathway that can be accurately quantified within a single spinal cord lesion. To test this hypothesis, we conducted quantitative ultrastructural analyses of individual demyelinated spinal cord lesions from chronically infected mice to determine whether pathological variables assessed within a single lesion accurately predicted global assessments of morphological and functional disease course. Within lesions we assessed by electron microscopy the frequencies of normally myelinated, remyelinated, and demyelinated axons, as well as degenerating axons and intra-
axonal
mitochondria. The frequency of medium and large remyelinated fibers within a single lesion served as a powerful indicator of
axonal
preservation and correlated with preserved neurological function. The number of degenerating axons and increased intra-
axonal
mitochondria also correlated strongly with global measures of disease course, such as total lesion load, spinal cord atrophy, and neurological function. This is the first study to demonstrate that functional severity of disease course is evident within a single demyelinated lesion analyzed morphometrically at the ultrastructural level.
...
PMID:Quantitative ultrastructural analysis of a single spinal cord demyelinated lesion predicts total lesion load, axonal loss, and neurological dysfunction in a murine model of multiple sclerosis. 1102 39
Clinical abnormalities in multiple sclerosis (MS) have classically been considered to be caused by demyelination and/or
axonal
degeneration; the possibility of molecular changes in neurons, such as the deployment of abnormal repertoires of ion channels that would alter neuronal electrogenic properties, has not been considered. Sensory Neuron-Specific sodium channel SNS displays a depolarized voltage dependence, slower activation and inactivation kinetics, and more rapid recovery from inactivation than classical "fast" sodium channels. SNS is selectively expressed in spinal sensory and trigeminal ganglion neurons within the peripheral nervous system and is not expressed within the normal brain. Here we show that sodium channel SNS mRNA and protein, which are not present within the cerebellum of control mice, are expressed within cerebellar Purkinje cells in a mouse model of MS, chronic relapsing experimental allergic
encephalomyelitis
. We also demonstrate SNS mRNA and protein expression within Purkinje cells from tissue obtained postmortem from patients with MS, but not in control subjects with no neurological disease. These results demonstrate a change in sodium channel expression in neurons within the brain in an animal model of MS and in humans with MS and suggest that abnormal patterns of neuronal ion channel expression may contribute to clinical abnormalities such as ataxia in these disorders.
...
PMID:Sensory neuron-specific sodium channel SNS is abnormally expressed in the brains of mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis and humans with multiple sclerosis. 1102 57
Among non-neoplastic lesions of the central nervous system, demyelinating pseudotumors of the group of acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
(ADEM) most frequently occasion neurosurgical intervention for purposes of definitive diagnosis and thus enter the domain of the surgical pathologist. Typically, ADEM presents with multifocal, bilateral lesions in an asymmetrical distribution. Especially monolocular manifestations may be diagnostically challenging. Due to the acuteness of clinical symptoms and the expansive, space-occupying character of the lesions a diffuse glioma, a metastatic disease, a primary cerebral Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, brain abscess, a parasitosis or an ischemic brain tissue necrosis may be suspected. This impression is supported by uptake of contrast-medium most pronounced at the periphery of the lesion and the subcortical location. The histomorphologic feature of relative
axonal
preservation in areas with acute myelin breakdown and lymphocytic infiltrates make the diagnosis of an acute primary demyelinating disease probable. A diagnosis of glioma may be prompted by the florid, cytologically atypical astrogliosis especially in intraoperative request. Based on a series of 14 cases of radiologically and bioptically documented cases of ADEM typical examples will be demonstrated and discussed.
...
PMID:[Neuropathological and neuroradiological aspects of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM)]. 1114 18
T-cell autoimmunity to myelin basic protein was recently shown to be neuroprotective in injured rat optic nerves. In the present study, using the mouse optic nerve, we examined whether active immunization rather than passive transfer of T-cells can be beneficial in protecting retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) from post-traumatic death. Before severe crush injury of the optic nerve, SJL/J and C3H.SW mice were actively immunized with encephalitogenic or nonencephalitogenic peptides of proteolipid protein (PLP) or myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG), respectively. At different times after the injury, the numbers of surviving RGCs in both strains immunized with the nonencephalitogenic peptides pPLP 190-209 or pMOG 1-22 were significantly higher than in injured controls treated with the non-self-antigen ovalbumin or with a peptide derived from beta-amyloid, a non-myelin-associated protein. Immunization with the encephalitogenic myelin peptide pPLP 139-151 was beneficial only when the disease it induced, experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
, was mild. The results of this study show that survival of RGCs after
axonal
injury can be enhanced by vaccination with an appropriate self-antigen. Furthermore, the use of nonencephalitogenic myelin peptides for immunization apparently allows neuroprotection without incurring the risk of an autoimmune disease. Application of these findings might lead to a promising new approach for treating optic neuropathies such as glaucoma.
...
PMID:Vaccination for neuroprotection in the mouse optic nerve: implications for optic neuropathies. 1115 Mar 29
MRI has facilitated diagnostic assessment of the corpus callosum. Diagnostic classification of solitary or multiple lesions of the corpus callosum has not attracted much attention, although signal abnormalities are not uncommon. Our aim was to identify characteristic imaging features of lesions frequently encountered in practice. We reviewed the case histories of 59 patients with lesions shown on MRI. The nature of the lesions was based on clinical features and/or long term follow-up (ischaemic 20, Virchow-Robin spaces 3, diffuse
axonal
injury 7, multiple sclerosis 11, hydrocephalus 5, acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
5, Marchiafava-Bignami disease 4, lymphoma 2, glioblastoma hamartoma each 1). The location in the sagittal plane, the relationship to the borders of the corpus callosum and midline and the size were documented. The 20 ischaemic lesions were asymmetrical but adjacent to the midline; the latter was involved in new or large lesions. Diffuse
axonal
injury commonly resulted in large lesions, which tended to be asymmetrical; the midline and borders of the corpus callosum were always involved. Lesions in MS were small, at the lower border of the corpus callosum next to the septum pellucidum, and crossed the midline asymmetrically. Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and the other perivenous inflammatory diseases caused relatively large, asymmetrical lesions. Hydrocephalus resulted in lesions of the upper part of the corpus callosum, and mostly in its posterior two thirds; they were found in the midline. Lesions in Marchiafava-Bignami disease were large, often symmetrically in the midline in the splenium and did not reach the edge of the corpus callosum.
...
PMID:Classification of acquired lesions of the corpus callosum with MRI. 1115 83
Glutamate excitotoxicity mediated by the AMPA/kainate-type of glutamate receptors is known not only to damage neurons but also the myelin-producing cell of the central nervous system (CNS), the oligodendrocyte. In Multiple Sclerosis (MS), myelin, oligodendrocytes and axons are lost or damaged as a result of an inflammatory attack on the CNS. Activated immune cells produce glutamate in large quantities by deamidating glutamine via glutaminase. Thus, we hypothesized that during inflammation in MS, glutamate excitotoxicity may contribute to the lesion. This was addressed by treating mice sensitized to develop acute experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) with an AMPA/kainate antagonist, NBQX. Treatment resulted in substantial amelioration of disease, increased oligodendrocyte survival and reduced
axonal
damage, as indicated by the levels of dephosphorylated neurofilament-H. Despite the clinical differences, NBQX-treatment had no effect on lesion size and did not reduce the degree of CNS inflammation. In addition, NBQX did not alter the proliferative activity of antigen-primed T cells in vitro, further indicating a lack of effect at the level of the immune system. In separate studies, infiltrating immune cells present in perivascular cuffs, commonly the site of entry for invading immune cells, were found to express glutaminase in abundance, supporting the production of glutamate in inflammatory lesions. Thus, glutamate excitotoxicity appears to be an important mechanism in autoimmune demyelination and its prevention with AMPA/kainate antagonists may prove to be an effective therapy for MS.
...
PMID:Glutamate excitotoxicity--a mechanism for axonal damage and oligodendrocyte death in Multiple Sclerosis? 1120 56
The demyelinating plaque is the paradigmatic lesion of multiple sclerosis (MS), but only recently attention has been given to
axonal
damage and to its role in the pathophysiology of disease. Albeit the possible relevance of
axonal
loss in MS and its experimental models, the amount and timing of
axonal
sufferance has been addressed only in experimental autoimmune
encephalomyelitis
(EAE) of rodents. In this report we observed that, in the marmoset model of EAE,
axonal
damage occurs early during the demyelinating process as assessed by immunoreactivity for amyloid precursor protein (APP) and non-phosphorylated neurofilaments (SMI-32 positive) detected mostly in early active lesions compared to late active and normal appearing white matter. The rare occurrence of morphological features of
axonal
transection, such as APP or SMI-32 positive spheroids and swellings, as well as an increase of neurofilament density in the demyelinated axons without accumulation of electron dense organelles or osmiophilic bodies, at electron microscopy, suggests that early
axonal
damage may be, at least in part, a reversible process. These findings are of relevance for the development of therapies, which can protect axons and enhance their function and survival.
...
PMID:Demyelination and axonal damage in a non-human primate model of multiple sclerosis. 1123 Oct 31
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