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Publication : Chronic Peripheral Inflammation Causes a Region-Specific Myeloid Response in the Central Nervous System.

First Author  Süß P Year  2020
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  30
Issue  12 Pages  4082-4095.e6
PubMed ID  32209470 Mgi Jnum  J:287649
Mgi Id  MGI:6416601 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2020.02.109
Citation  Suss P, et al. (2020) Chronic Peripheral Inflammation Causes a Region-Specific Myeloid Response in the Central Nervous System. Cell Rep 30(12):4082-4095.e6
abstractText  Systemic immune dysregulation contributes to the development of neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases. The precise effect of chronic peripheral immune stimulation on myeloid cells across anatomical brain regions is unclear. Here, we demonstrate brain-region-specific differences in myeloid responses induced by chronic peripheral inflammation. This shift in the myeloid compartment is associated with the appearance of an inflammatory myeloid subpopulation in the cortex, striatum, and thalamus accompanied by regional transcriptomic fingerprints that include induction of chemokines, complement factors, and endothelial adhesion molecules. In contrast, myeloid immune responses within the hippocampus and cerebellum are subtle or absent. Treatment with the anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha (anti-TNF-alpha) antibody infliximab ablates the region-specific inflammatory response. A region-specific myeloid cell response to chronic peripheral inflammation is observed in postmortem brains from individuals with rheumatoid arthritis. Our data suggest that chronic peripheral inflammation has heterogeneous effects on the brain, as evidenced by the spectrum of myeloid cell responses observed across brain regions.
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