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A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis

The 18 kDa translocator protein (TSPO) is increasingly used to study brain and spinal cord inflammation in degenerative diseases of the CNS such as multiple sclerosis. The enhanced TSPO PET signal that arises during disease is widely considered to reflect activated pathogenic microglia, although qua...

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Autores principales: Nutma, Erik, Stephenson, Jodie A, Gorter, Rianne P, de Bruin, Joy, Boucherie, Deirdre M, Donat, Cornelius K, Breur, Marjolein, van der Valk, Paul, Matthews, Paul M, Owen, David R, Amor, Sandra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6821167/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31578541
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awz287
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author Nutma, Erik
Stephenson, Jodie A
Gorter, Rianne P
de Bruin, Joy
Boucherie, Deirdre M
Donat, Cornelius K
Breur, Marjolein
van der Valk, Paul
Matthews, Paul M
Owen, David R
Amor, Sandra
author_facet Nutma, Erik
Stephenson, Jodie A
Gorter, Rianne P
de Bruin, Joy
Boucherie, Deirdre M
Donat, Cornelius K
Breur, Marjolein
van der Valk, Paul
Matthews, Paul M
Owen, David R
Amor, Sandra
author_sort Nutma, Erik
collection PubMed
description The 18 kDa translocator protein (TSPO) is increasingly used to study brain and spinal cord inflammation in degenerative diseases of the CNS such as multiple sclerosis. The enhanced TSPO PET signal that arises during disease is widely considered to reflect activated pathogenic microglia, although quantitative neuropathological data to support this interpretation have not been available. With the increasing interest in the role of chronic microglial activation in multiple sclerosis, characterising the cellular neuropathology associated with TSPO expression is of clear importance for understanding the cellular and pathological processes on which TSPO PET imaging is reporting. Here we have studied the cellular expression of TSPO and specific binding of two TSPO targeting radioligands ((3)H-PK11195 and (3)H-PBR28) in tissue sections from 42 multiple sclerosis cases and 12 age-matched controls. Markers of homeostatic and reactive microglia, astrocytes, and lymphocytes were used to investigate the phenotypes of cells expressing TSPO. There was an approximate 20-fold increase in cells double positive for TSPO and HLA-DR in active lesions and in the rim of chronic active lesion, relative to normal appearing white matter. TSPO was uniformly expressed across myeloid cells irrespective of their phenotype, rather than being preferentially associated with pro-inflammatory microglia or macrophages. TSPO+ astrocytes were increased up to 7-fold compared to normal-appearing white matter across all lesion subtypes and accounted for 25% of the TSPO+ cells in these lesions. To relate TSPO protein expression to ligand binding, specific binding of the TSPO ligands (3)H-PK11195 and (3)H-PBR28 was determined in the same lesions. TSPO radioligand binding was increased up to seven times for (3)H-PBR28 and up to two times for (3)H-PK11195 in active lesions and the centre of chronic active lesions and a strong correlation was found between the radioligand binding signal for both tracers and the number of TSPO+ cells across all of the tissues examined. In summary, in multiple sclerosis, TSPO expression arises from microglia of different phenotypes, rather than being restricted to microglia which express classical pro-inflammatory markers. While the majority of cells expressing TSPO in active lesions or chronic active rims are microglia/macrophages, our findings also emphasize the significant contribution of activated astrocytes, as well as smaller contributions from endothelial cells. These observations establish a quantitative framework for interpretation of TSPO in multiple sclerosis and highlight the need for neuropathological characterization of TSPO expression for the interpretation of TSPO PET in other neurodegenerative disorders.
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spelling pubmed-68211672019-11-04 A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis Nutma, Erik Stephenson, Jodie A Gorter, Rianne P de Bruin, Joy Boucherie, Deirdre M Donat, Cornelius K Breur, Marjolein van der Valk, Paul Matthews, Paul M Owen, David R Amor, Sandra Brain Original Articles The 18 kDa translocator protein (TSPO) is increasingly used to study brain and spinal cord inflammation in degenerative diseases of the CNS such as multiple sclerosis. The enhanced TSPO PET signal that arises during disease is widely considered to reflect activated pathogenic microglia, although quantitative neuropathological data to support this interpretation have not been available. With the increasing interest in the role of chronic microglial activation in multiple sclerosis, characterising the cellular neuropathology associated with TSPO expression is of clear importance for understanding the cellular and pathological processes on which TSPO PET imaging is reporting. Here we have studied the cellular expression of TSPO and specific binding of two TSPO targeting radioligands ((3)H-PK11195 and (3)H-PBR28) in tissue sections from 42 multiple sclerosis cases and 12 age-matched controls. Markers of homeostatic and reactive microglia, astrocytes, and lymphocytes were used to investigate the phenotypes of cells expressing TSPO. There was an approximate 20-fold increase in cells double positive for TSPO and HLA-DR in active lesions and in the rim of chronic active lesion, relative to normal appearing white matter. TSPO was uniformly expressed across myeloid cells irrespective of their phenotype, rather than being preferentially associated with pro-inflammatory microglia or macrophages. TSPO+ astrocytes were increased up to 7-fold compared to normal-appearing white matter across all lesion subtypes and accounted for 25% of the TSPO+ cells in these lesions. To relate TSPO protein expression to ligand binding, specific binding of the TSPO ligands (3)H-PK11195 and (3)H-PBR28 was determined in the same lesions. TSPO radioligand binding was increased up to seven times for (3)H-PBR28 and up to two times for (3)H-PK11195 in active lesions and the centre of chronic active lesions and a strong correlation was found between the radioligand binding signal for both tracers and the number of TSPO+ cells across all of the tissues examined. In summary, in multiple sclerosis, TSPO expression arises from microglia of different phenotypes, rather than being restricted to microglia which express classical pro-inflammatory markers. While the majority of cells expressing TSPO in active lesions or chronic active rims are microglia/macrophages, our findings also emphasize the significant contribution of activated astrocytes, as well as smaller contributions from endothelial cells. These observations establish a quantitative framework for interpretation of TSPO in multiple sclerosis and highlight the need for neuropathological characterization of TSPO expression for the interpretation of TSPO PET in other neurodegenerative disorders. Oxford University Press 2019-11 2019-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6821167/ /pubmed/31578541 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awz287 Text en © The Author(s) (2019). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Articles
Nutma, Erik
Stephenson, Jodie A
Gorter, Rianne P
de Bruin, Joy
Boucherie, Deirdre M
Donat, Cornelius K
Breur, Marjolein
van der Valk, Paul
Matthews, Paul M
Owen, David R
Amor, Sandra
A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
title A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
title_full A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
title_fullStr A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
title_full_unstemmed A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
title_short A quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
title_sort quantitative neuropathological assessment of translocator protein expression in multiple sclerosis
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6821167/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31578541
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awz287
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