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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Monje ML, Toda H, Palmer TD. Inflammatory blockade restores adult hippocampal neurogenesis. Science. 2003 Dec 5;302(5651):1760-5. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Antiinflammatory Drugs Protect Hippocampal Neurogenesis

Comment by:  Beka Solomon
Submitted 19 January 2004  |  Permalink Posted 19 January 2004

These two recent exciting studies demonstrate that local inflammation inhibits adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus in different diseased animal models [1,2]. The suppression of hippocampal neurogenesis by activated microglia may explain the cognitive dysfunction and adds another angle to the rationale behind immunotherapeutics in Alzheimer's disease. The authors showed that decreased neurogenesis was accompanied with, and probably fueled by, activation of microglia, as neurogenesis was tightly correlated to the degree of microglial activation. Further support comes from the use of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, like indomethacin, and a selective inhibitor of microglia activation, minocycline, which were able to restore hippocampal neurogenesis in inflammation without affecting neurogenesis in control animals [1].

Inflammatory changes—including microgliosis, astrocytosis, complement activation, cytokine elevation, and acute phase protein changes—are thought to represent, at least in part, a response to the early accumulation of Aβ1-42 in the AD brain [3-6]. It appears...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescent staining on sections used the following primary antibodies and working concentrations: mouse anti-NeuN (1:4, gift of R. Mullen); guinea pig anti-GFAP (1:800, Harlan); mouse anti-type III btubulin (Tuj-1, 1:500, Berkeley Antibody Co.); rabbit anti-NG2 (1:200, Chemicon); mouse anti-rat CD11b (1:200, Serotec); mouse anti-ED-1 (1:100, Research Diagnostics Inc.); biotinylated-Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato) lectin (1:200, Vector).

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