Severe oxidative stress in an acute inflammatory demyelinating model in the rhesus monkey.
Jordon DunhamReinofke van de VisJan BauerJacqueline WubbenNikki van DrielJon D LamanBert A 't HartYolanda S KapPublished in: PloS one (2017)
Oxidative stress is increasingly implicated as a co-factor of tissue injury in inflammatory/demyelinating disorders of the central nervous system (CNS), such as multiple sclerosis (MS). While rodent experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) models diverge from human demyelinating disorders with respect to limited oxidative injury, we observed that in a non-human primate (NHP) model for MS, namely EAE in the common marmoset, key pathological features of the disease were recapitulated, including oxidative tissue injury. Here, we investigated the presence of oxidative injury in another NHP EAE model, i.e. in rhesus macaques, which yields an acute demyelinating disease, which may more closely resemble acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) than MS. Rhesus monkey EAE diverges from marmoset EAE by abundant neutrophil recruitment into the CNS and destructive injury to white matter. This difference prompted us to investigate to which extent the oxidative pathway features elicited in MS and marmoset EAE are reflected in the acute rhesus monkey EAE model. The rhesus EAE brain was characterized by widespread demyelination and active lesions containing numerous phagocytic cells and to a lesser extent T cells. We observed induction of the oxidative stress pathway, including injury, with a predilection of p22phox expression in neutrophils and macrophages/microglia. In addition, changes in iron were observed. These results indicate that pathogenic mechanisms in the rhesus EAE model may differ from the marmoset EAE and MS brain due to the neutrophil involvement, but may in the end lead to similar induction of oxidative stress and injury.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- multiple sclerosis
- white matter
- liver failure
- mass spectrometry
- induced apoptosis
- ms ms
- endothelial cells
- respiratory failure
- dna damage
- aortic dissection
- intensive care unit
- inflammatory response
- hepatitis b virus
- poor prognosis
- resting state
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- long non coding rna
- early onset
- neuropathic pain
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- spinal cord injury
- cell cycle arrest
- functional connectivity
- cerebrospinal fluid
- heat shock