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Metabotropic glutamate receptor-4 modulates adaptive immunity and restrains neuroinflammation
Author(s) -
Francesca Fallarino,
Claudia Volpi,
Francesco Fazio,
Sereotartomaso,
Carmine Vacca,
Carla L. Busceti,
Silvio Bicciato,
Giuseppe Battaglia,
Valeria Bruno,
Paolo Puccetti,
Maria Cristina Fioretti,
Ferdinando Nicoletti,
Ursula Grohmann,
Roberto Di Marco
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
nature medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.536
H-Index - 547
eISSN - 1546-170X
pISSN - 1078-8956
DOI - 10.1038/nm.2183
Subject(s) - neuroinflammation , experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis , multiple sclerosis , metabotropic glutamate receptor , astrocyte , glutamate receptor , immunology , t cell , immune system , encephalomyelitis , biology , acquired immune system , metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 , receptor , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , inflammation , neuroscience , central nervous system , biochemistry
High amounts of glutamate are found in the brains of people with multiple sclerosis, an inflammatory disease marked by progressive demyelination. Glutamate might affect neuroinflammation via effects on immune cells. Knockout mice lacking metabotropic glutamate receptor-4 (mGluR4) were markedly vulnerable to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE, a mouse model of multiple sclerosis) and developed responses dominated by interleukin-17-producing T helper (T(H)17) cells. In dendritic cells (DCs) from those mice, defective mGluR4 signaling-which would normally decrease intracellular cAMP formation-biased T(H) cell commitment to the T(H)17 phenotype. In wild-type mice, mGluR4 was constitutively expressed in all peripheral DCs, and this expression increased after cell activation. Treatment of wild-type mice with a selective mGluR4 enhancer increased EAE resistance via regulatory T (T(reg)) cells. The high amounts of glutamate in neuroinflammation might reflect a counterregulatory mechanism that is protective in nature and might be harnessed therapeutically for restricting immunopathology in multiple sclerosis.

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