ovalbumin and Encephalitis

ovalbumin has been researched along with Encephalitis* in 7 studies

Other Studies

7 other study(ies) available for ovalbumin and Encephalitis

ArticleYear
Exposure to formaldehyde and diisononyl phthalate exacerbate neuroinflammation through NF-κB activation in a mouse asthma model.
    Ecotoxicology and environmental safety, 2018, Nov-15, Volume: 163

    Diisononyl phthalate (DINP) and formaldehyde both are associated with asthma and allergies. However, it is unclear about the adverse effect of DINP and formaldehyde exposure on the brain for asthma patients. Here, we determined the effect of DINP and/or formaldehyde exposure on neuroinflammation in brain by a murine asthma model and investigated the underlying mechanisms. Mice were exposed to formaldehyde and/or DINP and sensitization with ovalbumin. The results show that exposure to formaldehyde and/or DINP not only exacerbated allergic asthma-like symptoms, but also promoted neuroinflammation in brain. The incrassation of the airway wall and exacerbation of neuroinflammation were more obviously when mice were subjected to a combined exposure to DINP and formaldehyde. Exposure to DINP and/or formaldehyde enhances oxidative stress and the activation of NF-κB in the prefrontal cortex of mouse asthma model. Exposure to DINP and/or formaldehyde also induced an increase in IL-1β, IL-17, and NGF. Blocking oxidative stress by administering melatonin or inhibiting NF-κB activation by treatment with Dehydroxymethylepoxyquinomicin effectively prevented increasing the levels IL-1β, IL-17 and nerve growth factor. The data indicated that DINP and/or formaldehyde exposure promoted neuroinflammation in the brain through enhanced oxidative stress and activation of NF-κB in a mouse asthma model.

    Topics: Animals; Asthma; Disease Models, Animal; Encephalitis; Formaldehyde; Gene Expression Regulation; Interleukin-17; Interleukin-1beta; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Nerve Growth Factor; NF-kappa B; Ovalbumin; Oxidative Stress; Phthalic Acids; Prefrontal Cortex; Respiratory Hypersensitivity; Signal Transduction

2018
Inhaled budesonide protects against chronic asthma-induced neuroinflammation in mouse brain.
    Journal of neuroimmunology, 2014, Aug-15, Volume: 273, Issue:1-2

    Chronic asthma is one of the most common respiratory diseases, characterized by airway inflammation. However, little is known whether asthma-induced airway inflammation might influence the brain. We found that chronic asthma not only resulted in peripheral inflammation, but also induced neuroinflammation which was characterized by microglial activations and increased levels of TNFα and IL-1β in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex. Simultaneously, we found that there was significant neuronal loss in the asthmatic mouse brain. Inhaled budesonide, the classic therapeutic drug for chronic asthma, could inhibit asthma-induced microglial activation, down-regulate TNFα and IL-1β but up-regulate TGFβ and IL-10 of mouse brain, and thereby attenuate neuronal loss. Further study showed that chronic asthma increased the expressions of TLR4 and p65/NFκB in the brain, which could be reversed by budesonide treatment. Therefore, the present study reveals that inhaled budesonide protects against asthma-induced neuroinflammation in mouse brain, which might be contributed to attenuate neuronal loss.

    Topics: Administration, Inhalation; Analysis of Variance; Animals; Anti-Inflammatory Agents; Asthma; Brain; Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid; Budesonide; CD11b Antigen; Cytokines; Disease Models, Animal; Encephalitis; Female; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; NF-kappa B; Ovalbumin; Signal Transduction; Toll-Like Receptor 4

2014
Induction of immunologic tolerance to myelin basic protein prevents central nervous system autoimmunity and improves outcome after stroke.
    Stroke, 2008, Volume: 39, Issue:5

    Animals subjected to an inflammatory insult at the time of stroke are predisposed to the development of an inflammatory autoimmune response to brain. This response is associated with worse neurological outcome. Because induction of immunologic tolerance to brain antigens before stroke onset is associated with improved outcome, we sought to determine whether this paradigm could prevent the deleterious autoimmune response to brain provoked by an inflammatory stimulus at the time of ischemia.. Male Lewis rats were tolerized to myelin basic protein (MBP) or ovalbumin by intranasal administration before middle cerebral artery occlusion. At the time of reperfusion, all animals received lipopolysaccharide (1 mg/kg intraperitoneal). Behavioral tests were performed at set time intervals.. One month after middle cerebral artery occlusion, lymphocytes from the spleens of MBP-tolerized animals were less likely to evidence an autoimmune response and more likely to evidence a regulatory response (Treg) toward MBP than those from ovalbumin-tolerized animals. Animals that had an inflammatory response toward MBP (a Th1 response) performed worse on behavioral tests than those that did not. Fractalkine, a surrogate marker of inflammation, was elevated in animals with a Th1 response to MBP.. These data extend our previous findings and suggest that deleterious autoimmunity to brain antigens can be prevented by prophylactically inducing regulatory T-cell responses to those antigens.

    Topics: Administration, Intranasal; Animals; Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System; Autoimmunity; Biomarkers; Chemokine CX3CL1; Encephalitis; Immune Tolerance; Immunity, Cellular; Immunotherapy; Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery; Male; Myelin Basic Protein; Ovalbumin; Rats; Rats, Inbred Lew; Stroke; T-Lymphocytes, Regulatory; Treatment Outcome

2008
CNS-irrelevant T-cells enter the brain, cause blood-brain barrier disruption but no glial pathology.
    The European journal of neuroscience, 2007, Volume: 26, Issue:6

    Invasion of autoreactive T-cells and alterations of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) represent early pathological manifestations of multiple sclerosis and its animal model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Non-CNS-specific T-cells are also capable of entering the CNS. However, studies investigating the spatial pattern of BBB alterations as well as the exact localization and neuropathological consequences of transferred non-CNS-specific cells have been thus far lacking. Here, we used magnetic resonance imaging and multiphoton microscopy, as well as histochemical and high-precision unbiased stereological analyses to compare T-cell transmigration, localization, persistence, relation to BBB disruption and subsequent effects on CNS tissue in a model of T-cell transfer of ovalbumin (OVA)- and proteolipid protein (PLP)-specific T-cells. BBB alterations were present in both EAE-mice and mice transferred with OVA-specific T-cells. In the latter case, BBB alterations were less pronounced, but the pattern of initial cell migration into the CNS was similar for both PLP- and OVA-specific cells [mean (SEM), 95 x 10(3) (7.6 x 10(3)) and 88 x 10(3) (18 x 10(3)), respectively]. Increased microglial cell density, astrogliosis and demyelination were, however, observed exclusively in the brain of EAE-mice. While mice transferred with non-neural-specific cells showed similar levels of rhodamine-dextran extravasation in susceptible brain regions, EAE-mice presented huge BBB disruption in brainstem and moderate leakage in cerebellum. This suggests that antigen specificity and not the absolute number of infiltrating cells determine the magnitude of BBB disruption and glial pathology.

    Topics: Animals; Blood-Brain Barrier; Brain; Cell Count; Central Nervous System; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Encephalitis; Female; Immunohistochemistry; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Microscopy, Fluorescence, Multiphoton; Myelin Proteolipid Protein; Neuroglia; Ovalbumin; Permeability; T-Lymphocytes

2007
Challenge with innate and protein antigens induces CCR7 expression by microglia in vitro and in vivo.
    Glia, 2006, Volume: 54, Issue:8

    Since activated microglia are able to phagocytose damaged cells and subsequently express major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) and co-stimulatory proteins, they are considered to function as antigen presenting cells (APCs) in the central nervous system. The maturation and migratory potential of professional APCs is associated with the expression of chemokine receptor CCR7. We therefore investigated whether the immunological activation of microglia induces CCR7 expression. We here present that activation of cultured microglia by both the innate antigen lipopolysaccharide and protein antigen ovalbumin rapidly induces CCR7 expression, accompanied by increased MHC-II expression. Moreover, it is shown that CCR7 expression in IBA-1 positive cells is induced during the symptom onset and progression of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a rodent model for multiple sclerosis. These results suggest that microglia express CCR7 under specific inflammatory conditions, corroborating the idea that microglia develop into APCs with migratory potential toward lymphoid chemokines.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Newborn; Antigen Presentation; Antigen-Presenting Cells; Antigens; Chemotaxis; Disease Models, Animal; Encephalitis; Encephalomyelitis, Autoimmune, Experimental; Female; Gliosis; Histocompatibility Antigens Class II; Lipopolysaccharides; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Microglia; Ovalbumin; Phagocytosis; Receptors, CCR7; Receptors, Chemokine

2006
Particulate matter in polluted air may increase biomarkers of inflammation in mouse brain.
    Neurotoxicology, 2005, Volume: 26, Issue:1

    The etiology of neurodegenerative disorders is at present unknown. However, many of these disorders are associated with an increase in oxidative and inflammatory events. Although a small percentage of these disorders are familial cases linked to specific genetic defects, most are idiopathic. Thus, environmental factors are thought to play an important role in the onset and progression of such disorders. We have demonstrated that exposure (4 h, 5 days per week for 2 weeks) to concentrated airborne particulate matter increases inflammatory indices in brain of ovalbumin-sensitized BALB/c mice. Animals were divided into three exposure groups: filtered air (control), ultrafine particles, or fine and ultrafine particles. The levels of proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1alpha) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) were increased in brain tissue of mice exposed to particulate matter compared to that of control animals. Levels of the immune-related transcription factor NF-kappaB were also found to be substantially elevated in the brain of exposed groups compared with the control group. These data indicate that components of inhaled particulate matter may trigger a proinflammatory response in nervous tissue that could contribute to the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative diseases.

    Topics: Air Pollutants; Animals; Antigens; Asthma; Biomarkers; Brain; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry, Physical; Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay; Encephalitis; Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay; Interleukin-1; Lipopolysaccharides; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Neurodegenerative Diseases; NF-kappa B; Ovalbumin; Particle Size; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha

2005
Lymphocytes from mice chronically infected with Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus produce demyelination of organotypic cultures after stimulation with the major encephalitogenic epitope of myelin proteolipid protein. Epitope spreading in TMEV infec
    Journal of neuroimmunology, 2000, Apr-03, Volume: 104, Issue:1

    Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) infection produces a chronic inflammatory disease of the spinal cord white matter, with striking similarities to both experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) and human multiple sclerosis (MS). The first phase of demyelination in this model appears to be dependent on a delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to viral antigens, driven by CD4+, Th1 lymphocytes. Macrophages, recruited in the infected CNS, would be responsible for most of the myelin damage. Recently, new populations of CD4+ lymphocytes were demonstrated in infected mice, this time with specificity for myelin antigens, particularly PLP. This suggests that, in the chronic phase of the disease, an autoimmune mechanism of demyelination, similar to EAE, may participate in the process of myelin destruction. The present study represents a first step in exploring the functional activity of these anti-myelin lymphocytes that emerge during the chronic phase of the disease. Lymphocytes were removed from chronically infected animals, they were stimulated with the major PLP encephalitogenic epitope for SJL/J mice, and they were added to organotypic myelinated spinal cord cultures for different lengths of time. Results show that lymphocytes stimulated with the major PLP epitope have a powerful capacity for demyelinating these cultures, while MBP stimulated lymphocytes and lymphocytes from control animals do not. This study, suggests that the anti-myelin response that emerges during the chronic phase of the infection is functionally active. A similar phenomenon of epitope spreading from virus to organ specific antigens may take place in humans and be involved in a number of immune-mediated diseases, including MS.

    Topics: Animals; Cardiovirus Infections; Cells, Cultured; Chronic Disease; Demyelinating Diseases; Encephalitis; Epitopes; Immunization; Lymphocytes; Mice; Mice, Inbred Strains; Myelin Basic Protein; Myelin Proteolipid Protein; Myelin Sheath; Organ Culture Techniques; Ovalbumin; Theilovirus

2000