Adrenoceptors as potential target for add-on immunomodulatory therapy in multiple sclerosis
Abstract
This review summarizes recent findings related to the role of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) in pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS) and its commonly used experimental model – experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). They indicate that noradrenaline, the key end-point mediator of the SNS, acting through β-adrenoceptor, has a contributory role in the early stages of MS/EAE development. This stage is characterized by the SNS hyperactivity (increased release of noradrenaline) reflecting the net effect of different factors, such as the disease-associated inflammation, stress, vitamin D hypovitaminosis, Epstein-Barr virus infection and dysbiosis. Thus, the administration of propranolol, a non-selective β-adrenoceptor blocker, readily crossing the blood-brain barrier, to experimental rats before the autoimmune challenge and in the early (preclinical/prodromal) phase of the disease mitigates EAE severity. This phenomenon has been ascribed to the alleviation of neuroinflammati...on (due to attenuation of primarily microglial activation/proinflammatory functions) and the diminution of the magnitude of the primary CD4+ T-cell autoimmune response (the effect associated with impaired autoantigen uptake by antigen presenting cells and their migration into draining lymph nodes). The former is partly related to breaking of the catecholamine-dependent self-amplifying microglial feed-forward loop and the positive feedback loop between microglia and the SNS, leading to down-regulation of the SNS hyperactivity and its enhancing influence on microglial activation/proinflammatory functions and the magnitude of autoimmune response. The effects of propranolol are shown to be more prominent in male EAE animals, the phenomenon important as males (like men) are likely to develop clinically more severe disease. Thus, these findings could serve as a firm scientific background for formulation of a new sex-specific immune-intervention strategy for the early phases of MS (characterized by the SNS hyperactivity) exploiting anti-(neuro)inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties of propranolol and other relatively cheap and safe adrenergic drugs with similar therapeutic profile.
Keywords:
Multiple sclerosis / Beta-adrenoceptor blockade / Microglia activation/polarization / Primary autoimmune response / Sympathetic nervous system activation / Th17-cell reactivationSource:
Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 2023, 243Publisher:
- Elsevier
Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200161 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Pharmacy) (RS-200161)
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200177 (Immunology Research Centre 'Branislav Janković' Torlak, Belgrade) (RS-200177)
Note:
- Peer-reviewed manuscript: http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/663
Related info:
DOI: 10.1016/j.pharmthera.2023.108358
ISSN: 0163-7258
PubMed: 36804434
WoS: 000946083800001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85148708455
Collections
Institution/Community
TorlakTY - JOUR AU - Pilipović, Ivan AU - Stojić-Vukanić, Zorica AU - Leposavić, Gordana PY - 2023 UR - http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/657 AB - This review summarizes recent findings related to the role of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) in pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS) and its commonly used experimental model – experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). They indicate that noradrenaline, the key end-point mediator of the SNS, acting through β-adrenoceptor, has a contributory role in the early stages of MS/EAE development. This stage is characterized by the SNS hyperactivity (increased release of noradrenaline) reflecting the net effect of different factors, such as the disease-associated inflammation, stress, vitamin D hypovitaminosis, Epstein-Barr virus infection and dysbiosis. Thus, the administration of propranolol, a non-selective β-adrenoceptor blocker, readily crossing the blood-brain barrier, to experimental rats before the autoimmune challenge and in the early (preclinical/prodromal) phase of the disease mitigates EAE severity. This phenomenon has been ascribed to the alleviation of neuroinflammation (due to attenuation of primarily microglial activation/proinflammatory functions) and the diminution of the magnitude of the primary CD4+ T-cell autoimmune response (the effect associated with impaired autoantigen uptake by antigen presenting cells and their migration into draining lymph nodes). The former is partly related to breaking of the catecholamine-dependent self-amplifying microglial feed-forward loop and the positive feedback loop between microglia and the SNS, leading to down-regulation of the SNS hyperactivity and its enhancing influence on microglial activation/proinflammatory functions and the magnitude of autoimmune response. The effects of propranolol are shown to be more prominent in male EAE animals, the phenomenon important as males (like men) are likely to develop clinically more severe disease. Thus, these findings could serve as a firm scientific background for formulation of a new sex-specific immune-intervention strategy for the early phases of MS (characterized by the SNS hyperactivity) exploiting anti-(neuro)inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties of propranolol and other relatively cheap and safe adrenergic drugs with similar therapeutic profile. PB - Elsevier T2 - Pharmacology and Therapeutics T1 - Adrenoceptors as potential target for add-on immunomodulatory therapy in multiple sclerosis VL - 243 DO - 10.1016/j.pharmthera.2023.108358 ER -
@article{ author = "Pilipović, Ivan and Stojić-Vukanić, Zorica and Leposavić, Gordana", year = "2023", abstract = "This review summarizes recent findings related to the role of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) in pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS) and its commonly used experimental model – experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). They indicate that noradrenaline, the key end-point mediator of the SNS, acting through β-adrenoceptor, has a contributory role in the early stages of MS/EAE development. This stage is characterized by the SNS hyperactivity (increased release of noradrenaline) reflecting the net effect of different factors, such as the disease-associated inflammation, stress, vitamin D hypovitaminosis, Epstein-Barr virus infection and dysbiosis. Thus, the administration of propranolol, a non-selective β-adrenoceptor blocker, readily crossing the blood-brain barrier, to experimental rats before the autoimmune challenge and in the early (preclinical/prodromal) phase of the disease mitigates EAE severity. This phenomenon has been ascribed to the alleviation of neuroinflammation (due to attenuation of primarily microglial activation/proinflammatory functions) and the diminution of the magnitude of the primary CD4+ T-cell autoimmune response (the effect associated with impaired autoantigen uptake by antigen presenting cells and their migration into draining lymph nodes). The former is partly related to breaking of the catecholamine-dependent self-amplifying microglial feed-forward loop and the positive feedback loop between microglia and the SNS, leading to down-regulation of the SNS hyperactivity and its enhancing influence on microglial activation/proinflammatory functions and the magnitude of autoimmune response. The effects of propranolol are shown to be more prominent in male EAE animals, the phenomenon important as males (like men) are likely to develop clinically more severe disease. Thus, these findings could serve as a firm scientific background for formulation of a new sex-specific immune-intervention strategy for the early phases of MS (characterized by the SNS hyperactivity) exploiting anti-(neuro)inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties of propranolol and other relatively cheap and safe adrenergic drugs with similar therapeutic profile.", publisher = "Elsevier", journal = "Pharmacology and Therapeutics", title = "Adrenoceptors as potential target for add-on immunomodulatory therapy in multiple sclerosis", volume = "243", doi = "10.1016/j.pharmthera.2023.108358" }
Pilipović, I., Stojić-Vukanić, Z.,& Leposavić, G.. (2023). Adrenoceptors as potential target for add-on immunomodulatory therapy in multiple sclerosis. in Pharmacology and Therapeutics Elsevier., 243. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pharmthera.2023.108358
Pilipović I, Stojić-Vukanić Z, Leposavić G. Adrenoceptors as potential target for add-on immunomodulatory therapy in multiple sclerosis. in Pharmacology and Therapeutics. 2023;243. doi:10.1016/j.pharmthera.2023.108358 .
Pilipović, Ivan, Stojić-Vukanić, Zorica, Leposavić, Gordana, "Adrenoceptors as potential target for add-on immunomodulatory therapy in multiple sclerosis" in Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 243 (2023), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pharmthera.2023.108358 . .