神经炎症和脑感染:历史背景和当前观点

Marina Bentivoglio, Raffaella Mariotti, Giuseppe Bertini
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引用次数: 43

摘要

本文概述了目前关于神经炎症的概念,以及在中枢神经系统的三种重要感染(狂犬病、脑型疟疾和非洲人类锥虫病或昏睡病)中神经元和非神经元细胞之间的对话。目前报告了受这些疾病影响的大量病例。在专门讨论卡米洛·高尔基问题的背景下,还介绍了对这些疾病的重大发现的历史注释。目前,神经炎症与慢性神经退行性疾病的发病机制密切相关。相反,神经科学界相对忽视了脑感染中的神经炎症信号,尽管上述感染提供了神经元和非神经元细胞间细胞间串扰改变的典型例子。在狂犬病中,宿主的免疫逃避策略导致神经炎症信号的沉默。在以脑疟疾为特征的血管内病理中,白细胞和疟原虫不进入脑实质。在昏睡病中,白细胞和非洲锥虫在感染的晚期侵入脑实质。后两种病理都留下了许多关于神经元功能靶向和非神经元细胞,特别是星形胶质细胞和小胶质细胞在这些疾病中的发病作用的问题。这三种感染的特点是非常严重的临床症状和相对保留的神经元结构。需要多学科的方法和神经科学界的一致行动来阐明这些可怕的脑部疾病中的细胞间串扰。这种努力也可能导致关于决定神经元死亡或存活的非神经元机制的新知识。
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Neuroinflammation and brain infections: Historical context and current perspectives

An overview of current concepts on neuroinflammation and on the dialogue between neurons and non-neuronal cells in three important infections of the central nervous systems (rabies, cerebral malaria, and human African trypanosomiasis or sleeping sickness) is here presented. Large numbers of cases affected by these diseases are currently reported. In the context of an issue dedicated to Camillo Golgi, historical notes on seminal discoveries on these diseases are also presented. Neuroinflammation is currently closely associated with pathogenetic mechanisms of chronic neurodegenerative diseases. Neuroinflammatory signaling in brain infections is instead relatively neglected in the neuroscience community, despite the fact that the above infections provide paradigmatic examples of alterations of the intercellular crosstalk between neurons and non-neuronal cells. In rabies, strategies of immune evasion of the host lead to silencing neuroinflammatory signaling. In the intravascular pathology which characterizes cerebral malaria, leukocytes and Plasmodium do not enter the brain parenchyma. In sleeping sickness, leukocytes and African trypanosomes invade the brain parenchyma at an advanced stage of infection. Both the latter pathologies leave open many questions on the targeting of neuronal functions and on the pathogenetic role of non-neuronal cells, and in particular astrocytes and microglia, in these diseases. All three infections are hallmarked by very severe clinical pictures and relative sparing of neuronal structure. Multidisciplinary approaches and a concerted action of the neuroscience community are needed to shed light on intercellular crosstalk in these dreadful brain diseases. Such effort could also lead to new knowledge on non-neuronal mechanisms which determine neuronal death or survival.

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Brain Research Reviews
Brain Research Reviews 医学-神经科学
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