Abstract

The role of stress effector systems in the initiation and progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), the most commonly used experimental model of MS, has strongly been suggested. To corroborate this notion, alterations in activity of the sympathoadrenal and sympathoneural axes of sympathoadrenal system (a major communication pathway between the central nervous system and the immune system), mirrored in altered release of their end-point mediators (adrenaline and noradrenaline, respectively), are shown to precede (in MS) and/or occur during development of MS and EAE in response to immune cell activation (in early phase of disease) and disease-related damage of sympathoadrenal system neurons and their projections (in late phase of disease). To add to the complexity, innate immunity cells and T-lymphocytes synthesize noradrenaline that may be implicated in a local autocrine/paracrine self-amplifying feed-forward loop to enhance myeloid-cell synthesis of proinflammatory cytokines and inflammatory injury. Furthermore, experimental manipulations targeting noradrenaline/adrenaline action are shown to influence clinical outcome of EAE, in a disease phase-specific manner. This is partly related to the fact that virtually all types of cells involved in the instigation and progression of autoimmune inflammation and target tissue damage in EAE/MS express functional adrenoceptors. Although catecholamines exert majority of immunomodulatory effects through β2-adrenoceptor, a role for α-adrenoceptors in EAE pathogenesis has also been indicated. In this review, we summarize all aforementioned aspects of immunopathogenetic action of catecholamines in EAE/MS as possibly important for designing new strategies targeting their action to prevent/mitigate autoimmune neuroinflammation and tissue damage.

Highlights

  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is one of the most common neurological disorders and cause of disability of young adults [1,2,3]

  • MS is the prototype of the autoimmune inflammatory diseases of the central nervous system (CNS), and is characterized by breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (BBB), neuroinflammation, and axonal damage [4, 5]

  • This review focuses the role of catecholamines in development of EAE/MS

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is one of the most common neurological disorders and cause of disability of young adults [1,2,3]. It has recently been reported that increased systemic noradrenaline levels due to sympathoneural system hyperactivity [134] in mice constitutively lacking α2a/c-adrenoceptor (constituting an important negative-feedback mechanism required for the presynaptic control of neurotransmitter release from sympathetic fibers) is associated with diminished pathogenic T-cell responses and CNS inflammation in EAE [135]. These findings might be explained by data suggesting that prolonged sympathoneural activation (as it is in late phases of inflammatory autoimmune diseases) leads to anti-inflammatory sympathoneural action [31]. Considering that individual’s elevated noradrenergic tone (e.g., due to genetics) may favor MS onset [140], such investigation should encompass animals of different genetic makeup

CONCLUSIONS
Atlas of MS 2013
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