Low‐dose γ‐irradiation promotes survival of injured neurons in the central nervous system via homeostasis‐driven proliferation of T cells

2004 
Protective autoimmunity was only recently recognized as a mechanism for attenuating the progression of neurodegeneration. Using a rat model of optic nerve crush or contusive spinal cord injury, and a mouse model of neurodegenerative conditions caused by injection of a toxic dose of intraocular glutamate, we show that a single low dose of whole-body or lymphoid-organ γ-irradiation significantly improved the spontaneous recovery. Animals with severe immune deficiency or deprived of mature T cells were unable to benefit from this treatment, suggesting that the irradiation-induced neuroprotection is immune mediated. This suggestion received further support from the findings that irradiation was accompanied by an increased incidence of activated T cells in the lymphoid organs and peripheral blood and an increase in mRNA encoding for the pro-inflammatory cytokines interleukin-12 and interferon-γ, and that after irradiation, passive transfer of a subpopulation of suppressive T cells (naturally occurring regulatory CD4+CD25+ T cells) wiped out the irradiation-induced protection. These results suggest that homeostasis-driven proliferation of T cells, induced by a single low-dose irradiation, leads to boosting of T cell-mediated neuroprotection and can be utilized clinically to fight off neurodegeneration and the threat of other diseases in which defense against toxic self-compounds is needed.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    41
    References
    58
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []