Exacerbation of motor neuron disease by chronic stimulation of innate immunity in a mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

MD Nguyen, T D'Aigle, G Gowing… - Journal of …, 2004 - Soc Neuroscience
MD Nguyen, T D'Aigle, G Gowing, JP Julien, S Rivest
Journal of Neuroscience, 2004Soc Neuroscience
Innate immunity is a specific and organized immunological program engaged by peripheral
organs and the CNS to maintain homeostasis after stress and injury. In neurodegenerative
disorders, its putative deregulation, featured by inflammation and activation of glial cells
resulting from inherited mutations or viral/bacterial infections, likely contributes to neuronal
death. However, it remains unclear to what extent environmental factors and innate immunity
cooperate to modulate the interactions between the neuronal and non-neuronal elements in …
Innate immunity is a specific and organized immunological program engaged by peripheral organs and the CNS to maintain homeostasis after stress and injury. In neurodegenerative disorders, its putative deregulation, featured by inflammation and activation of glial cells resulting from inherited mutations or viral/bacterial infections, likely contributes to neuronal death. However, it remains unclear to what extent environmental factors and innate immunity cooperate to modulate the interactions between the neuronal and non-neuronal elements in the perturbed CNS. In the present study, we addressed the effects of acute and chronic administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a Gram-negative bacterial wall component, in a genetic model of neurodegeneration. Transgenic mice expressing a mutant form of the superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1G37R) linked to familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis were challenged intraperitoneally with a single nontoxic or repeated injections of LPS (1 mg/kg). At different ages, SOD1G37R mice responded normally to acute endotoxemia. Remarkably, only a chronic challenge with LPS in presymptomatic 6-month-old SOD1G37R mice exacerbated disease progression by 3 weeks and motor axon degeneration. Closely associated with the severity of disease is the stronger and restricted upregulation of the receptor of innate immunity Toll-like receptor 2 and proinflammatory cytokines in degenerating regions of the ventral spinal cord and efferent fiber tracts of the brain from the LPS-treated SOD1G37R mice. This robust immune response was not accompanied by the establishment of acquired immunity. Our results provide solid evidence that environmental factors and innate immunity can cooperate to influence the course of disease of an inherited neuropathology.
Soc Neuroscience