11 research outputs found

    Modulation of Experimental Herpes Encephalitis-Associated Neurotoxicity through Sulforaphane Treatment

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    Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by brain-infiltrating macrophages and neutrophils, as well as resident microglia, are pivotal to pathogen clearance during viral brain infection. However, unchecked free radical generation is also responsible for damage to and cytotoxicity of critical host tissue bystander to primary infection. These unwanted effects of excessive ROS are combated by local cellular production of antioxidant enzymes, including heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) and glutathione peroxidase 1 (Gpx1). In this study, we showed that experimental murine herpes encephalitis triggered robust ROS production, as well as an opposing upregulation of the antioxidants HO-1 and Gpx1. This antioxidant response was insufficient to prevent tissue damage, neurotoxicity, and mortality associated with viral brain infection. Previous studies corroborate our data supporting astrocytes as the major antioxidant producer in brain cell cultures exposed to HSV-1 stimulated microglia. We hypothesized that stimulating opposing antioxidative responses in astrocytes, as well as neurons, would mitigate the effects of ROS-mediated neurotoxicity both in vitro and during viral brain infection in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that the addition of sulforaphane, a potent stimulator of antioxidant responses, enhanced HO-1 and Gpx1 expression in astrocytes through the activation of nuclear factor-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2). Additionally, sulforaphane treatment was found to be effective in reducing neurotoxicity associated with HSV-stimulated microglial ROS production. Finally, intraperitoneal injections of sulforaphane into mice during active HSV infection reduced neuroinflammation via a decrease in brain-infiltrating leukocytes, macrophage- and neutrophil-produced ROS, and MHCII-positive, activated microglia. These data support a key role for astrocyte-produced antioxidants in modulating oxidative stress and neuronal damage in response to viral infection

    Building an integrated infrastructure for exploring biodiversity: field collections and archives of mammals and parasites

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    Museum specimens play an increasingly important role in predicting the outcomes and revealing the consequences of anthropogenically driven disruption of the biosphere. As ecological communities respond to ongoing environmental change, host-parasite interactions are also altered. This shifting landscape of host-parasite associations creates opportunities for colonization of different hosts and emergence of new pathogens, with implications for wildlife conservation and management, public health, and other societal concerns. Integrated archives that document and preserve mammal specimens along with their communities of associated parasites and ancillary data provide a powerful resource for investigating, anticipating, and mitigating the epidemiological, ecological, and evolutionary impacts of environmental perturbation. Mammalogists who collect and archive mammal specimens have a unique opportunity to expand the scope and impact of their field work by collecting the parasites that are associated with their study organisms. We encourage mammalogists to embrace an integrated and holistic sampling paradigm and advocate for this to become standard practice for museum-based collecting. To this end, we provide a detailed, field-tested protocol to give mammalogists the tools to collect and preserve host and parasite materials that are of high quality and suitable for a range of potential downstream analyses (e.g., genetic, morphological). Finally, we also encourage increased global cooperation across taxonomic disciplines to build an integrated series of baselines and snapshots of the changing biosphere. Los especΓ­menes de museo desempeΓ±an un papel cada vez mΓ‘s importante tanto en la descripciΓ³n de los resultados de la alteraciΓ³n antropogΓ©nica de la biosfera como en la predicciΓ³n de sus consecuencias. Dado que las comunidades ecolΓ³gicas responden al cambio ambiental, tambiΓ©n se alteran las interacciones hospedador-parΓ‘sito. Este panorama cambiante de asociaciones hospedador-parΓ‘sito crea oportunidades para la colonizaciΓ³n de diferentes hospedadores y para la apariciΓ³n de nuevos patΓ³genos, con implicancias en la conservaciΓ³n y manejo de la vida silvestre, la salud pΓΊblica y otras preocupaciones de importancia para la sociedad. Archivos integrados que documentan y preservan especΓ­menes de mamΓ­feros junto con sus comunidades de parΓ‘sitos y datos asociados, proporcionan un fuerte recurso para investigar, anticipar y mitigar los impactos epidemiolΓ³gicos, ecolΓ³gicos y evolutivos de las perturbaciones ambientales. Los mastozoΓ³logos que recolectan y archivan muestras de mamΓ­feros, tienen una oportunidad ΓΊnica de ampliar el alcance e impacto de su trabajo de campo mediante la recolecciΓ³n de los parΓ‘sitos que estΓ‘n asociados con los organismos que estudian. Alentamos a los mastozoΓ³logos a adoptar un paradigma de muestreo integrado y holΓ­stico y abogamos para que esto se convierta en una prΓ‘ctica estΓ‘ndarizada de la obtenciΓ³n de muestras para museos. Con este objetivo, proporcionamos un protocolo detallado y probado en el campo para brindar a los mastozoΓ³logos las herramientas para recolectar y preservar materiales de parΓ‘sitos y hospedadores de alta calidad y adecuados para una gran variedad de anΓ‘lisis subsecuentes (e.g., genΓ©ticos, morfolΓ³gicos, etc.). Finalmente, tambiΓ©n abogamos por una mayor cooperaciΓ³n global entre las diversas disciplinas taxonΓ³micas para construir una serie integrada de lΓ­neas de base y registros actuales de nuestra cambiante biosfera

    Infectious Agents and Neurodegeneration

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    A growing body of epidemiologic and experimental data point to chronic bacterial and viral infections as possible risk factors for neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Infections of the central nervous system, especially those characterized by a chronic progressive course, may produce multiple damage in infected and neighbouring cells. The activation of inflammatory processes and host immune responses cause chronic damage resulting in alterations of neuronal function and viability, but different pathogens can also directly trigger neurotoxic pathways. Indeed, viral and microbial agents have been reported to produce molecular hallmarks of neurodegeneration, such as the production and deposit of misfolded protein aggregates, oxidative stress, deficient autophagic processes, synaptopathies and neuronal death. These effects may act in synergy with other recognized risk factors, such as aging, concomitant metabolic diseases and the host's specific genetic signature. This review will focus on the contribution given to neurodegeneration by herpes simplex type-1, human immunodeficiency and influenza viruses, and by Chlamydia pneumoniae
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