Diego Gomez-Nicola
University of Southampton
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Publication
Featured researches published by Diego Gomez-Nicola.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013
Diego Gomez-Nicola; Nina L. Fransen; Stefano Suzzi; V.H. Perry
An important component of chronic neurodegenerative diseases is the generation of an innate inflammatory response within the CNS. Microglial and astroglial cells play a key role in the development and maintenance of this inflammatory response, showing enhanced proliferation and activation. We studied the time course and regulation of microglial proliferation, using a mouse model of prion disease. Our results show that the proliferation of resident microglial cells accounts for the expansion of the population during the development of the disease. We identify the pathway regulated by the activation of CSF1R and the transcription factors PU.1 and C/EBPα as the molecular regulators of the proliferative response, correlating with the chronic human neurodegenerative conditions variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and Alzheimers disease. We show that targeting the activity of CSF1R inhibits microglial proliferation and slows neuronal damage and disease progression. Our results demonstrate that microglial proliferation is a major component in the evolution of chronic neurodegeneration, with direct implications for understanding the contribution of the CNS innate immune response to disease progression.
The Neuroscientist | 2015
Diego Gomez-Nicola; V. Hugh Perry
The study of the dynamics and functions of microglia in the healthy and diseased brain is a matter of intense scientific activity. The application of new techniques and new experimental approaches has allowed the identification of novel microglial functions and the redefinition of classic ones. In this review, we propose the study of microglial functions, rather than their molecular profiles, to better understand and define the roles of these cells in the brain. We review current knowledge on the role of surveillant microglia, proliferating microglia, pruning/neuromodulatory microglia, phagocytic microglia, and inflammatory microglia and the molecular profiles that are associated with these functions. In the remodeling scenario of microglial biology, the analysis of microglial functional states will inform about the roles in health and disease and will guide us to a more precise understanding of the multifaceted roles of this never-resting cells.
Brain | 2016
Adrian Olmos-Alonso; Sjoerd T. T. Schetters; S. Sri; K. Askew; R. Mancuso; Mariana Vargas-Caballero; Christian Hölscher; V.H. Perry; Diego Gomez-Nicola
Microglial proliferation and activation is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease. Olmos-Alonso et al. show that microglial proliferation in Alzheimer’s disease tissue correlates with overactivation of the colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R) pathway. CSF1R blockade arrests microglial proliferation and activation in a mouse model of Alzheimer-like pathology and slows disease progression.
Cell Reports | 2017
Katharine Askew; Kaizhen Li; Adrian Olmos-Alonso; Fernando García-Moreno; Yajie Liang; Philippa Richardson; Tom Tipton; Mark A. Chapman; Kristoffer Riecken; Sol Beccari; Amanda Sierra; Zoltán Molnár; Mark S. Cragg; Olga Garaschuk; V. Hugh Perry; Diego Gomez-Nicola
Summary Microglia play key roles in brain development, homeostasis, and function, and it is widely assumed that the adult population is long lived and maintained by self-renewal. However, the precise temporal and spatial dynamics of the microglial population are unknown. We show in mice and humans that the turnover of microglia is remarkably fast, allowing the whole population to be renewed several times during a lifetime. The number of microglial cells remains steady from late postnatal stages until aging and is maintained by the spatial and temporal coupling of proliferation and apoptosis, as shown by pulse-chase studies, chronic in vivo imaging of microglia, and the use of mouse models of dysregulated apoptosis. Our results reveal that the microglial population is constantly and rapidly remodeled, expanding our understanding of its role in the maintenance of brain homeostasis.
Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011
Diego Gomez-Nicola; Beatriz Valle-Argos; Noemí Pallas-Bazarra; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro
The role of IL-15 in the regulation of neural stem cell biology appears as a key mechanism in the control of adult neurogenesis, with direct implications for the development of pathologies with a neuroimmune component.
Glia | 2016
Kanchan Bisht; Kaushik P. Sharma; Cynthia Lecours; Maria Gabriela Sánchez; Hassan El Hajj; Giampaolo Milior; Adrian Olmos-Alonso; Diego Gomez-Nicola; Giamal N. Luheshi; Luc Vallières; Igor Branchi; Laura Maggi; Cristina Limatola; Oleg Butovsky; Marie-Ève Tremblay
The past decade has witnessed a revolution in our understanding of microglia. These immune cells were shown to actively remodel neuronal circuits, leading to propose new pathogenic mechanisms. To study microglial implication in the loss of synapses, the best pathological correlate of cognitive decline across chronic stress, aging, and diseases, we recently conducted ultrastructural analyses. Our work uncovered the existence of a new microglial phenotype that is rarely present under steady state conditions, in hippocampus, cerebral cortex, amygdala, and hypothalamus, but becomes abundant during chronic stress, aging, fractalkine signaling deficiency (CX3CR1 knockout mice), and Alzheimers disease pathology (APP‐PS1 mice). Even though these cells display ultrastructural features of microglia, they are strikingly distinct from the other phenotypes described so far at the ultrastructural level. They exhibit several signs of oxidative stress, including a condensed, electron‐dense cytoplasm and nucleoplasm making them as “dark” as mitochondria, accompanied by a pronounced remodeling of their nuclear chromatin. Dark microglia appear to be much more active than the normal microglia, reaching for synaptic clefts, while extensively encircling axon terminals and dendritic spines with their highly ramified and thin processes. They stain for the myeloid cell markers IBA1 and GFP (in CX3CR1‐GFP mice), and strongly express CD11b and microglia‐specific 4D4 in their processes encircling synaptic elements, and TREM2 when they associate with amyloid plaques. Overall, these findings suggest that dark microglia, a new phenotype that we identified based on their unique properties, could play a significant role in the pathological remodeling of neuronal circuits, especially at synapses. GLIA 2016;64:826–839
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008
Diego Gomez-Nicola; Beatriz Valle-Argos; Margarita Suardíaz; Justin S. Taylor; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro
The release of inflammatory mediators from immune and glial cells either in the peripheral or CNS may have an important role in the development of physiopathological processes such as neuropathic pain. Microglial, then astrocytic activation in the spinal cord, lead to chronic inflammation, alteration of neuronal physiology and neuropathic pain. Standard experimental models of neuropathic pain include an important peripheral inflammatory component, which involves prominent immune cell activation and infiltration. Among potential immunomodulators, the T‐cell cytokine interleukin‐15 (IL‐15) has a key role in regulating immune cell activation and glial reactivity after CNS injury. Here we show, using the model of chronic constriction of the sciatic nerve (CCI), that IL‐15 is essential for the development of the early inflammatory events in the spinal cord after a peripheral lesion that generates neuropathic pain. IL‐15 expression in the spinal cord was identified in both astroglial and microglial cells and was present during the initial gliotic and inflammatory (NFκB) response to injury. The expression of IL‐15 was also identified as a cue for macrophage and T‐cell activation and infiltration in the sciatic nerve, as shown by intraneural injection of the cytokine and activity blockage approaches. We conclude that the regulation of IL‐15 and hence the initial events following its expression after peripheral nerve injury could have a future therapeutic potential in the reduction of neuroinflammation.
Glia | 2008
Diego Gomez-Nicola; Beatriz Valle-Argos; D. Wolfgang Pita-Thomas; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro
Although reactive glia formation after neuronal degeneration or traumatic damage is one of the hallmarks of central nervous system (CNS) injury, we have little information on the signals that direct activation of resting glia. IL‐15, a pro‐inflammatory cytokine involved in regulating the response of T and B cells, may be also key for the regulation of early inflammatory events in the nervous system. IL‐15 was expressed in the CNS, most abundantly in cerebellum and hippocampus, mainly in astrocytes and in some projection neurons. Using a rodent model of acute inflammatory injury [lipopolysaccharide (LPS) injection], we found enhanced expression of IL‐15 in both reactive astroglia and microglia, soon after CNS injury. Blockade of IL‐15 activity with an antibody to the cytokine, reversed activation of both glial types, suggesting that IL‐15 has a major role in the generation of gliotic tissue and in the regulation of neuroimmune responses. Because IL‐15 appears to modulate the inflammatory environment acutely generated after CNS injury, regulating IL‐15 expression seems a clear antiinflammatory therapy to improve the outcome of neurodegenerative diseases and CNS trauma.
Brain | 2014
Diego Gomez-Nicola; Stefano Suzzi; Mariana Vargas-Caballero; Nina L. Fransen; Hussain Al-Malki; Jose Manuel Garcia-Verdugo; Kristoffer Riecken; Boris Fehse; V. Hugh Perry
Increased neurogenesis has been reported in neurodegenerative disease, but its significance is unclear. In a mouse model of prion disease, Gomez-Nicola et al. detect increased neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus that partially counteracts neuronal loss. Targeting neurogenesis may have therapeutic potential.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2012
Elisa Burgos; Diego Gomez-Nicola; David Pascual; María Isabel Martín; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; Carlos Goicoechea
Spinal glial activation contributes to the development and maintenance of chronic pain states, including neuropathic pain of diverse etiologies. Cannabinoid compounds have shown antinociceptive properties in a variety of neuropathic pain models and are emerging as a promising class of drugs to treat neuropathic pain. Thus, the effects of repeated treatment with WIN 55,212-2, a synthetic cannabinoid agonist, were examined throughout the development of paclitaxel-induced peripheral neuropathy. Painful neuropathy was induced in male Wistar rats by intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of paclitaxel (1mg/kg) on four alternate days. Paclitaxel-treated animals received WIN 55,212-2 (1mg/kg, i.p.) or minocycline (15 mg/kg, i.p.), a microglial inhibitor, daily for 14 days, simultaneous with the antineoplastic. The development of hypersensitive behaviors was assessed on days 1, 7, 14, 21 and 28 following the initial administration of drugs. Both the activation of glial cells (microglia and astrocytes) at day 29 and the time course of proinflammatory cytokine release within the spinal cord were also determined. Similar to minocycline, repeated administration of WIN 55,212-2 prevented the development of thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia in paclitaxel-treated rats. WIN 55,212-2 treatment also prevented spinal microglial and astrocytic activation evoked by paclitaxel at day 29 and attenuated the early production of spinal proinflammatory cytokines (interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α). Our results confirm changes in the reactivity of glial cells during the development of peripheral neuropathy induced by paclitaxel and support a preventive effect of WIN 55,212-2, probably via glial cells reactivity inactivation, on the development of this neuropathy.