TY - JOUR KW - Animals KW - Antigens, Bacterial KW - Apoptosis KW - Axons KW - B-Lymphocytes KW - Bacterial Adhesion KW - Cell Division KW - Coculture Techniques KW - Culture Techniques KW - Demyelinating Diseases KW - Ganglia, Spinal KW - Genes, RAG-1 KW - Glycolipids KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Macrophages KW - Mice KW - Mice, Inbred C57BL KW - Mice, Knockout KW - Mutation KW - Mycobacterium leprae KW - Myelin Sheath KW - Nerve Degeneration KW - Nerve Fibers, Myelinated KW - Neurons KW - Schwann Cells KW - Sciatic Nerve KW - T-Lymphocytes AU - Rambukkana A AU - Zanazzi G AU - Tapinos N AU - Salzer J AB -
Demyelination results in severe disability in many neurodegenerative diseases and nervous system infections, and it is typically mediated by inflammatory responses. Mycobacterium leprae, the causative organism of leprosy, induced rapid demyelination by a contact-dependent mechanism in the absence of immune cells in an in vitro nerve tissue culture model and in Rag1-knockout (Rag1-/-) mice, which lack mature B and T lymphocytes. Myelinated Schwann cells were resistant to M. leprae invasion but undergo demyelination upon bacterial attachment, whereas nonmyelinated Schwann cells harbor intracellular M. leprae in large numbers. During M. leprae-induced demyelination, Schwann cells proliferate significantly both in vitro and in vivo and generate a more nonmyelinated phenotype, thereby securing the intracellular niche for M. leprae.
BT - Science (New York, N.Y.) C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11988579?dopt=Abstract DA - 2002 May 03 DO - 10.1126/science.1067631 IS - 5569 J2 - Science LA - eng N2 -Demyelination results in severe disability in many neurodegenerative diseases and nervous system infections, and it is typically mediated by inflammatory responses. Mycobacterium leprae, the causative organism of leprosy, induced rapid demyelination by a contact-dependent mechanism in the absence of immune cells in an in vitro nerve tissue culture model and in Rag1-knockout (Rag1-/-) mice, which lack mature B and T lymphocytes. Myelinated Schwann cells were resistant to M. leprae invasion but undergo demyelination upon bacterial attachment, whereas nonmyelinated Schwann cells harbor intracellular M. leprae in large numbers. During M. leprae-induced demyelination, Schwann cells proliferate significantly both in vitro and in vivo and generate a more nonmyelinated phenotype, thereby securing the intracellular niche for M. leprae.
PY - 2002 SP - 927 EP - 31 T2 - Science (New York, N.Y.) TI - Contact-dependent demyelination by Mycobacterium leprae in the absence of immune cells. VL - 296 SN - 1095-9203 ER -