News and Research
Immune System
Immune Proteins Play Role In Brain Development And Remodeling;
Discovery Suggests New Theory For Dyslexia, Parkinson's
Disease And Multiple Sclerosis
12-15-2000
Boston, MA Two immune proteins found in the brains of mice
help the brain develop and may play key roles in triggering
developmental disorders like dyslexia and neurodegenerative
disorders like Parkinson's Disease, according to a Harvard
Medical School study reported in today's issue of Science.
Although
neuroscientists have recently found evidence that the brain
is subject to immune surveillance, the Harvard researchers
were surprised to discover the mouse brain also produces
its own immune molecules, the proteins Class I MHC and CD3-zeta.
In the immune system, the two proteins act as part of a
lock and key system to recognize and rid the body of foreign
invaders. In the brain, they may be part of a signaling
system that recognizes and eliminates inappropriate neural
connections.
"What
we find surprising and important about the results is that
we found a novel use by neurons for molecules previously
thought only to be the domain of the immune system,"
said Carla Shatz, Nathan Marsh Pusey professor of neurobiology
at HMS and lead author of the study. "What are these
immune molecules doing in the brain? The results of the
studies imply they are being used by neurons to accomplish
the normal business of neurons during development and synaptic
plasticity."
While
the brain's early neural connections are determined by genetic
instructions, the refashioning that occurs during development
– and in learning – is a product of both genes
and the brain's own activity. The research by Shatz and
her team suggests the two immune proteins play a role in
the activity-dependent remodeling of the brain. The immune
proteins have been found not only in the hippocampus, the
region of the brain associated with learning, and the lateral
geniculate nucleus, the visual area of the brain, but also
in many other regions of the brain in mice.
The
researchers found that mutant mice lacking either of the
two immune proteins failed to undergo normal development
in the geniculate nucleus. Normally, projections from the
eye form a small tidy patch in the region, but in the mutants,
the connections created a larger and fuzzier profile, presumably
because cells in the area lacked the molecular mechanism
for getting rid of the unneeded connections. "We think
Class I MHC acts like an anti-glue," said Shatz. The
mutant mice also experienced abnormal functioning in the
hippocampus, the region of the brain associated with learning.
In normal mice, production of Class I MHC is especially
high in primary sensory areas of the brain – those
areas that are thought to function abnormally in people
with dyslexia. Further studies are expected to show if the
mutant mice also have problems processing sensory information.
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Though the evidence is still preliminary, the research
could help clarify the neurobiological dimensions of dyslexia. Preliminary
studies by British researchers of families with dyslexia suggest that
some of them carry genetic defects on chromosome 6 – in the
same region of the chromosome that carries the Class I MHC genes.
"It's very speculative at this point, but it
remains certainly a possibility that this could in some way be related
to their dyslexia," Shatz said.
The widespread presence of MHC Class I in the brain
prompts another speculation: that neurodegenerative diseases such
as Parkinson's and multiple sclerosis may be the result of a misguided
attack by immune cells on Class I MHC-bearing neurons.
"The idea that neurons would normally be expressing
Class I MHC might help explain why certain neurons die or are attacked,"
Shatz said. "MHC Class I-bearing neurons could be the target
for an abnormal immune response. I think that people need to start
thinking about that."
This
article has been adapted from a news release issued by Harvard Medical
School, www.hms.harvard.edu.
Next
- Back to Strengthen Immune System
Research