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Demyelination

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demyelination

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with demyelination across World Wide.
8 curated items6 ePosters2 Seminars
Updated about 2 years ago
8 items · demyelination
8 results
SeminarNeuroscience

The role of CNS microglia in health and disease

Kyrargyri Vassiliki
Department of Immunology, Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Hellenic Pasteur Institute, Athens, Greece
Oct 24, 2023

Microglia are the resident CNS macrophages of the brain parenchyma. They have many and opposing roles in health and disease, ranging from inflammatory to anti-inflammatory and protective functions, depending on the developmental stage and the disease context. In Multiple Sclerosis, microglia are involved to important hallmarks of the disease, such as inflammation, demyelination, axonal damage and remyelination, however the exact mechanisms controlling their transformation towards a protective or devastating phenotype during the disease progression remains largely unknown until now. We wish to understand how brain microglia respond to demyelinating insults and how their behaviour changes in recovery. To do so we developed a novel histopathological analysis approach in 3D and a cell-based analysis tool that when applied in the cuprizone model of demyelination revealed region- and disease- dependent changes in microglial dynamics in the brain grey matter during demyelination and remyelination. We now use similar approaches with the aim to unravel sensitive changes in microglial dynamics during neuroinflammation in the EAE model. Furthermore, we employ constitutive knockout and tamoxifen-inducible gene-targeting approaches, immunological techniques, genetics and bioinformatics and currently seek to clarify the specific role of the brain resident microglial NF-κB molecular pathway versus other tissue macrophages in EAE.

SeminarNeuroscience

The immunopathology of advanced multiple sclerosis

Inge Huitinga
Brain Bank
Oct 18, 2020

We recently analyzed a large cohort of multiple sclerosis (MS) autopsy cases of the Netherlands Brain Bank (NBB) and showed that 57% of the lesion in advanced MS is active (containing activated microglia/macrophages). These active lesions correlated with disease severity and differed between males and female MS patients.1 Already in normal appearing white matter microglia show early signs of demyelination.5 T cells are also frequently present in advanced stages of MS and have a tissue resident memory (Trm) phenotype, are more frequently CD8+ then CD4+, are located perivascular, enriched in active and mixed active/inactive MS lesions and correlated with lesion activity, lesion load and disease severity.2-4 Like Trm cells, B cells are located perivascular and were also enriched in active MS lesions but in lower numbers and a proportion of the MS patients had almost no detectable B cells in the regions analyzed. MS patients with limited presence of B cells had less severe MS, and less active and mixed active /inactive lesions. We conclude that advanced MS is characterize by a high innate and adaptive immune activity which is heterogeneous and relates to the clinical disease course.

ePoster

Cannabinoid CB1 receptors in oligodendrocytes: Modulation of energy metabolism and autoimmune demyelination

Ester Sanchez, Ana Bernal-Chico, Aitziber Uribe, Teresa Colomer, Carmen Utrilla, Andrés Mateo Baraibar, Asier Ruiz, Tania Aguado, Manuel Guzman, Ismael Galve-Roperh, Javier Palazuelos, Susana Mato

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Elucidating the impact of demyelination and remyelination on inhibitory synaptic transmission in the somatosensory cortex of a mouse model of cuprizone

Eduardo Fernandez Perez, Maria Cecilia Angulo

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Longitudinal single-cell and brain transcriptomic characterization of microglia signatures during experimental demyelination and remyelination

Athena Boutou, Ilias Roufagalas, Katerina Politopoulou, Spyros Tastsoglou, Maya Abouzeid, Giorgos Skoufos, Michael R Johnson, Lesley Probert

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Morphological and molecular characterization of cortical protoplasmic astrocytes during early experimental demyelination

Ilias Roufagalas, Athena Boutou, Spyros Tastsoglou, Maya Abouzeid, Katerina Politopoulou, Michael R Johnson, Lesley Probert

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Targeting PAC1 receptors to prevent CNS white matter inflammation, synapse loss, and locomotor deficits in the cuprizone demyelination model

Margo Jansen, Yasir Mahmood, Jordan Lee, Sarah Thomas Broome, James Waschek, Alessandro Castorina

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The trial of small molecules to promote re-myelination and neuroprotection in an animal model of demyelination and neuroinflammation

Maurice Pagnin, Rahimeh Emamnejad, Ezgi Ozturk, Danica Nheu, Steven Petratos

FENS Forum 2024