학술논문

Anti-inflammatory substances can influence some glial cell types but not others.
Document Type
Article
Source
Brain Research. Nov2013, Vol. 1539, p34-40. 7p.
Subject
*ANTI-inflammatory agents
*NEUROGLIA
*LABORATORY rats
*TOLL-like receptors
*DEXAMETHASONE
*CYTOKINES
*ASTROCYTES
Language
ISSN
0006-8993
Abstract
Abstract: In rat microglial enriched cultures, expressing Toll-like receptor 4, we studied cytokine release after exposure with 1ng/ml LPS for 0.5–24h. Dexamethasone and corticosterone exposure served as controls. We focused on whether naloxone, ouabain, and bupivacaine, all agents with reported anti-inflammatory effects on astrocytes, could affect the release of TNF-α and IL-1β in microglia. Our results show that neither ultralow (10−12 M) nor high (10−6 M) concentrations of these agents had demonstrable effects on cytokine release in microglia. The results indicate that anti-inflammatory substances exert specific influences on different glial cell types. Astrocytes seem to be functional targets for anti-inflammatory substances while microglia respond directly to inflammatory stimuli and are thus more sensitive to anti-inflammatory substances like corticoids. The physiological relevance might be that astrocyte dysfunction influences neuronal signalling both due to direct disturbance of astrocyte functions and in the communication within the astrocyte networks. When the signalling between astrocytes is working, then microglia produce less pro-inflammatory cytokines. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]