Mild injury may render brain cells vulnerable to immune system
attack
DURHAM, N.C. -- Duke University Medical Center researchers have discovered
that a seemingly mild "insult" to the brain could sensitize neurons to attack by
immune system proteins that are otherwise protective.
The finding could explain why sufferers of Alzheimer's and other
neurodegenerative diseases significantly worsen following such insults.
According to the scientists, such minimal "excitotoxic insults" could include
brief seizures, mild head trauma or stroke, or even transient anoxia from
fainting while standing too quickly.
The scientists believe that drugs to selectively inhibit the immune proteins
could reduce the rate of neural damage in a wide range of neurodegenerative
diseases. Such drugs could also protect other organs against damage from
autoimmune diseases such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, in which the immune
system attacks body tissues, said the scientists.
In an article in the October 24, 2002, Neuron, Zhi-Qi Xiong and James
McNamara report studies of brain cell cultures that reveal how the set of immune
proteins, called "complement," can kill neurons. The research was supported by
the National Institutes of Health. Complement proteins circulate in the blood in
an inactive form, but when triggered by infection or other invaders, they form
complexes that can attack the invaders.
"For a decade or more, there have been studies in which complement proteins
were detected in the vicinity of senile plaques of patients with Alzheimer's
disease and also in the brain of other neurodegenerative diseases," said
McNamara, who is professor and chair of the medical center's department of
neurobiology. According to McNamara, while this association suggested that
complement could harm neurons, evidence also existed that complement could
promote removal of a damaging protein that causes the plaques in Alzheimer's
disease.
The reality, Xiong and McNamara discovered, seems more complicated. The
complement immune system pathway consists of an "early activation" pathway that
can be protective in Alzheimer's disease, and a "terminal" pathway, in which the
proteins combine to create a "membrane attack complex." It is the terminal
pathway and this complex that damages neurons sensitized to complement attack by
mild brain insult, said McNamara.
"Basically, we have discovered how an insult like transient ischemic attacks,
minimal drop in blood pressure or a minimal blow to the head could facilitate
the transition from the early activation pathway to the terminal membrane attack
pathway, and transform a protective effect into a damaging effect on the brain,"
said McNamara.
Initial clues that complement could attack brain cells came from the Duke
scientists' earlier studies of a rare childhood brain disease called Rasmussen's
encephalitis.
"We observed that in this autoimmune disease, even though the immune system
is constantly attacking the brain, the progressive loss of neurological function
in these children occurred in a stepwise fashion, following flurries of
seizures," said McNamara. The scientists found that the brains of children
suffering from the disease showed evidence of activation of complement, and the
complement proteins were concentrated in the neurons. Also, said McNamara, the
scientists' studies of an animal model of the disease showed similar attack by
complement.
What's more, he said, studies by other researchers had demonstrated in animal
models and cell cultures that fleeting insults can damage neurons by causing an
"excitotoxic" overload of the neurotransmitter glutamate.
Earlier brain tissue culture studies had shown that complement could damage
brain cells called astrocytes preferentially over neurons, said McNamara.
"This didn't make sense," said McNamara. "In our tissue culture studies, the
astrocytes were preferentially damaged, but in brains, the complement was
deposited on neurons. And so we reasoned that perhaps there was an interaction
between the excessive excitation mediated by glutamate and a neuron's
sensitivity to attack by complement."
In their experiments reported in Neuron, Xiong and McNamara exposed cultures
of neurons and astrocytes, first to modest levels of glutamate, as might be
generated by a mild insult to the brain. When they next exposed these same
cultures to activated complement proteins, the neurons were preferentially
killed.
Their studies also showed that the damage was specifically caused by the
membrane attack pathway of complement and not by the early activation pathway.
And, they found that the glutamate treatment sensitized neurons, but not
astrocytes, to attack by complement.
Finally, the scientists found that the excitotoxic sensitization of neurons
required both calcium and chemicals called "reactive oxygen species." While the
scientists do not understand these requirements, said McNamara, they believe
that the finding might offer further clues to the metabolic pathway by which the
neuron's defenses against complement are compromised. Importantly, said
McNamara, their finding raises the possibility of protecting the brains of
patients with neurodegenerative disease.
"The identification of a small-molecule inhibitor of the terminal pathway of
complement may prove to be tremendously beneficial to patients with late-stage
neurodegenerative disease, reducing the rate of brain injury," he said.
What's more, said McNamara, such drugs "could be helpful in diseases of many
other organs, not just the brain, in which inappropriate activation of
complement damages the tissues, like rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and others."
McNamara emphasized the importance of basic studies of rare diseases to such
discoveries.
"I think this is one of countless examples in human biology in which study of
a rare disease, in this case Rasmussen's encephalitis, sheds light on mechanisms
of common diseases," he said. "We would have been unlikely to have gained this
invaluable insight into the immune system and the brain, had we not been
studying Rasmussen's encephalitis."
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