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Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death

Fas is a cell surface receptor that transduces cell death signals when cross-linked by agonist antibodies or by fas ligand. In this study, we examined the potential of fas to contribute to oligodendrocyte (OL) injury and demyelination as they occur in the human demyelinating disease multiple scleros...

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Autores principales: D'Souza, Sameer D., Bonetti, Bruno, Balasingam, Vijayabalan, Cashman, Neil R., Barker, Philip A., Troutt, Anthony B., Raine, Cedric S., Antel, Jack P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2196365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8976190
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author D'Souza, Sameer D.
Bonetti, Bruno
Balasingam, Vijayabalan
Cashman, Neil R.
Barker, Philip A.
Troutt, Anthony B.
Raine, Cedric S.
Antel, Jack P.
author_facet D'Souza, Sameer D.
Bonetti, Bruno
Balasingam, Vijayabalan
Cashman, Neil R.
Barker, Philip A.
Troutt, Anthony B.
Raine, Cedric S.
Antel, Jack P.
author_sort D'Souza, Sameer D.
collection PubMed
description Fas is a cell surface receptor that transduces cell death signals when cross-linked by agonist antibodies or by fas ligand. In this study, we examined the potential of fas to contribute to oligodendrocyte (OL) injury and demyelination as they occur in the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis (MS). Immunohistochemical study of central nervous system (CNS) tissue from MS subjects demonstrated elevated fas expression on OLs in chronic active and chronic silent MS lesions compared with OLs in control tissue from subjects with or without other neurologic diseases. In such lesions, microglia and infiltrating lymphocytes displayed intense immunoreactivity to fas ligand. In dissociated glial cell cultures prepared from human adult CNS tissue, fas expression was restricted to OLs. Fas ligation with the anti-fas monoclonal antibody M3 or with the fas–ligand induced rapid OL cell membrane lysis, assessed by LDH release and trypan blue uptake and subsequent cell death. In contrast to the activity of fas in other cellular systems, dying OLs did not exhibit evidence of apoptosis, assessed morphologically and by terminal transferase–mediated d-uridine triphosphate-biotin nick-end-labeling staining for DNA fragmentation. Other stimuli such as C2-ceramide were capable of inducing rapid apoptosis in OLs. Antibodies directed at other surface molecules expressed on OLs or the M33 nonactivating anti-fas monoclonal antibody did not induce cytolysis of OLs. Our results suggest that fas-mediated signaling might contribute in a novel cytolytic manner to immune-mediated OL injury in MS.
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spelling pubmed-21963652008-04-22 Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death D'Souza, Sameer D. Bonetti, Bruno Balasingam, Vijayabalan Cashman, Neil R. Barker, Philip A. Troutt, Anthony B. Raine, Cedric S. Antel, Jack P. J Exp Med Article Fas is a cell surface receptor that transduces cell death signals when cross-linked by agonist antibodies or by fas ligand. In this study, we examined the potential of fas to contribute to oligodendrocyte (OL) injury and demyelination as they occur in the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis (MS). Immunohistochemical study of central nervous system (CNS) tissue from MS subjects demonstrated elevated fas expression on OLs in chronic active and chronic silent MS lesions compared with OLs in control tissue from subjects with or without other neurologic diseases. In such lesions, microglia and infiltrating lymphocytes displayed intense immunoreactivity to fas ligand. In dissociated glial cell cultures prepared from human adult CNS tissue, fas expression was restricted to OLs. Fas ligation with the anti-fas monoclonal antibody M3 or with the fas–ligand induced rapid OL cell membrane lysis, assessed by LDH release and trypan blue uptake and subsequent cell death. In contrast to the activity of fas in other cellular systems, dying OLs did not exhibit evidence of apoptosis, assessed morphologically and by terminal transferase–mediated d-uridine triphosphate-biotin nick-end-labeling staining for DNA fragmentation. Other stimuli such as C2-ceramide were capable of inducing rapid apoptosis in OLs. Antibodies directed at other surface molecules expressed on OLs or the M33 nonactivating anti-fas monoclonal antibody did not induce cytolysis of OLs. Our results suggest that fas-mediated signaling might contribute in a novel cytolytic manner to immune-mediated OL injury in MS. The Rockefeller University Press 1996-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2196365/ /pubmed/8976190 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
D'Souza, Sameer D.
Bonetti, Bruno
Balasingam, Vijayabalan
Cashman, Neil R.
Barker, Philip A.
Troutt, Anthony B.
Raine, Cedric S.
Antel, Jack P.
Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death
title Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death
title_full Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death
title_fullStr Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death
title_full_unstemmed Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death
title_short Multiple Sclerosis: Fas Signaling in Oligodendrocyte Cell Death
title_sort multiple sclerosis: fas signaling in oligodendrocyte cell death
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2196365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8976190
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