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Dive into the research topics where Michael B. Keough is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael B. Keough.


Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2013

Pathophysiology of the brain extracellular matrix: a new target for remyelination

Lorraine Lau; Rowena Cua; Michael B. Keough; Sarah Haylock-Jacobs; V. Wee Yong

The extracellular matrix (ECM) occupies a notable proportion of the CNS and contributes to its normal physiology. Alterations to the ECM occur after neural injury (for example, in multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury or Alzheimers disease) and can have drastic consequences. Of note, injury-induced changes in chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans (CSPGs) — a family of ECM proteoglycans — can lead to the inhibition of myelin repair. Here, we highlight the pathophysiological roles of the brains ECM, particularly those of CSPGs, after neural insults and discuss how the ECM can be targeted to promote remyelination.


Nature | 2016

Expanding antigen-specific regulatory networks to treat autoimmunity

Xavier Clemente-Casares; Jesús Blanco; Poornima Ambalavanan; Jun Yamanouchi; Santiswarup Singha; Cesar Fandos; Sue Tsai; Jinguo Wang; Nahir Garabatos; Cristina Izquierdo; Smriti M. Agrawal; Michael B. Keough; V. Wee Yong; Eddie James; Anna Moore; Yang Yang; Thomas Stratmann; Pau Serra; Pere Santamaria

Regulatory T cells hold promise as targets for therapeutic intervention in autoimmunity, but approaches capable of expanding antigen-specific regulatory T cells in vivo are currently not available. Here we show that systemic delivery of nanoparticles coated with autoimmune-disease-relevant peptides bound to major histocompatibility complex class II (pMHCII) molecules triggers the generation and expansion of antigen-specific regulatory CD4+ T cell type 1 (TR1)-like cells in different mouse models, including mice humanized with lymphocytes from patients, leading to resolution of established autoimmune phenomena. Ten pMHCII-based nanomedicines show similar biological effects, regardless of genetic background, prevalence of the cognate T-cell population or MHC restriction. These nanomedicines promote the differentiation of disease-primed autoreactive T cells into TR1-like cells, which in turn suppress autoantigen-loaded antigen-presenting cells and drive the differentiation of cognate B cells into disease-suppressing regulatory B cells, without compromising systemic immunity. pMHCII-based nanomedicines thus represent a new class of drugs, potentially useful for treating a broad spectrum of autoimmune conditions in a disease-specific manner.


Annals of Neurology | 2012

Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans in demyelinated lesions impair remyelination

Lorraine Lau; Michael B. Keough; Sarah Haylock-Jacobs; Rowena Cua; Axinia Döring; Scott Sloka; David P. Stirling; Serge Rivest; V. Wee Yong

Failure of remyelination is a critical impediment to recovery in multiple sclerosis (MS). Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) have been reported to accumulate in MS lesions, and we thus examined the functional roles of CSPGs on oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), oligodendrocytes, and remyelination.


Progress in Neurobiology | 2014

Remyelination after spinal cord injury: Is it a target for repair?

Jason R. Plemel; Michael B. Keough; Greg J. Duncan; Joseph S. Sparling; V. Wee Yong; Peter K. Stys; Wolfram Tetzlaff

After spinal cord injury (SCI) there is prolonged and dispersed oligodendrocyte cell death that is responsible for widespread demyelination. To regenerate this lost myelin, many investigators have transplanted myelin-producing cells as a treatment for contusive SCI. There are several documented examples of cellular transplantation improving function after injury, with the degree of myelin regeneration correlating with functional recovery. On the basis of these findings, remyelination is hypothesized to be a beneficial strategy to promote recovery after injury. As cellular transplantation is now entering clinical trials for treatment of SCI, it is important to dissect carefully whether accelerating remyelination after SCI is a valid clinical target. In this review we will discuss the consequences of demyelination and the potential benefits of remyelination as it relates to injury. Prolonged demyelination is hypothesized to enhance axonal vulnerability to degeneration, and is thereby thought to contribute to the axonal degeneration that underlies the permanent functional losses associated with SCI. Currently, strategies to promote remyelination after SCI are largely limited to cellular transplantation. This review discusses those strategies as well as new, and largely untested, modes of therapy that aim to coax endogenous cells residing adjacent to the injury site to differentiate in order to replace lost myelin.


Glia | 2013

Overcoming neurite-inhibitory chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans in the astrocyte matrix.

Rowena Cua; Lorraine Lau; Michael B. Keough; Rajiv Midha; Suneel S. Apte; V. Wee Yong

Acute trauma to the central nervous system (CNS) can result in permanent damage and loss of function related to the poor regeneration of injured axons. Injured axons encounter several barriers to regeneration, such as the glial scar at the injury site. The glial scar contains extracellular matrix (ECM) macromolecules deposited by reactive astrocytes in response to injury. The scar ECM is rich in chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), macromolecules that inhibit axonal growth. CSPGs consist of a core protein with attachment sites for glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains. An extensive literature demonstrates that enzymatic removal of the GAG chains by chondroitinase ABC permits some axonal regrowth; however, the remaining intact core proteins also possess inhibitory domains. Because metalloproteinases can degrade core proteins of CSPGs, we have evaluated five matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and a related protease—a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs‐4 (ADAMTS‐4)—for their capacity to overcome CSPG inhibition of neuritic growth in culture. The metalloproteinases were selected for their known expression after CNS injuries. Of the MMPs, MMP‐3, ‐7 and ‐8 reduced or abolished inhibition of neurite outgrowth on a purified CSPG substrate and on an astrocyte‐derived ECM. ADAMTS‐4 also attenuated CSPG inhibition of neurites and had the additional benefits of neither degrading laminin nor causing neurotoxicity. The efficacy of ADAMTS‐4 matched that of blocking the EGFR signaling previously reported to mediate CSPG inhibition. These findings highlight ADAMTS‐4 as a superior protease for overcoming CSPG inhibition of axonal regeneration in the CNS.


Annals of clinical and translational neurology | 2014

Laquinimod reduces neuroaxonal injury through inhibiting microglial activation

Manoj Kumar Mishra; Janet Wang; Michael B. Keough; Yan Fan; Claudia Silva; Scott Sloka; Liat Hayardeny; Wolfgang Brück; V. Wee Yong

Laquinimod is an emerging oral medication for multiple sclerosis (MS) that reduces brain atrophy and progression of disability in two Phase III clinical trials. The mechanism of these effects is unclear. Persistent activation of microglia occurs in MS and contributes to injury. Thus, we investigated whether laquinimod alters properties of microglia in culture and in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), and whether this reduces neurodegeneration.


Nature Communications | 2016

An inhibitor of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan synthesis promotes central nervous system remyelination

Michael B. Keough; Jim A. Rogers; Ping Zhang; Samuel K. Jensen; Erin L. Stephenson; Tieyu Chen; Mitchel G. Hurlbert; Lorraine Lau; Khalil S. Rawji; Jason R. Plemel; Marcus Koch; Chang-Chun Ling; V. Wee Yong

Remyelination is the generation of new myelin sheaths after injury facilitated by processes of differentiating oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs). Although this repair phenomenon occurs in lesions of multiple sclerosis patients, many lesions fail to completely remyelinate. A number of factors have been identified that contribute to remyelination failure, including the upregulated chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) that comprise part of the astrogliotic scar. We show that in vitro, OPCs have dramatically reduced process outgrowth in the presence of CSPGs, and a medication library that includes a number of recently reported OPC differentiation drugs failed to rescue this inhibitory phenotype on CSPGs. We introduce a novel CSPG synthesis inhibitor to reduce CSPG content and find rescued process outgrowth from OPCs in vitro and accelerated remyelination following focal demyelination in mice. Preventing CSPG deposition into the lesion microenvironment may be a useful strategy to promote repair in multiple sclerosis and other neurological disorders.


Neurotherapeutics | 2013

Remyelination Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis

Michael B. Keough; V. Wee Yong

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic demyelinating disease of the central nervous system characterized by infiltration of immune cells and progressive damage to myelin and axons. All therapeutics used to treat MS have been developed to target an overactive immune response, with aims to reduce disease activity. Chronic demyelinated axons are further prone to irreversible damage and death, and it is imperative that new therapies address this critical issue. Remyelination, the generation of new myelin in the adult nervous system, is an endogenous repair mechanism that restores function of denuded axons and delays their deterioration. Although remyelination can be extensive in some patients, the majority of cases limit repair only to the acute phase of disease. A significant current drive in new MS therapeutics is to identify targets that can promote remyelination by boosting endogenous oligodendrocyte precursor cells to form new myelin. Also, a number of inhibitory pathways have been identified in chronic MS lesions that prevent oligodendrocyte precursor cells from being properly recruited to demyelinated lesions or interfere with their differentiation to myelin-forming oligodendrocytes. In this review, we introduce the phenomenon of remyelination from the view of experimental models and studies in MS patients, describe a potential role in remyelination for currently available MS mediations, and discuss many avenues that are being actively studied to promote remyelination. The next frontier in MS therapeutics will supplement immunomodulation with agents that directly foster myelin repair, with aims to delay disease progression and recover lost neurological functions.


Autoimmunity Reviews | 2011

Chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans: Extracellular matrix proteins that regulate immunity of the central nervous system

Sarah Haylock-Jacobs; Michael B. Keough; Lorraine Lau; V. Wee Yong

The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a complex network of scaffolding molecules that also plays an important role in cell signalling, migration and tissue structure. In the central nervous system (CNS), the ECM is integral to the efficient development/guidance and survival of neurons and axons. However, changes in distribution of the ECM in the CNS may significantly enhance pathology in CNS disease or following injury. One group of ECM proteins that is important for CNS homeostasis is the chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans (CSPGs). Up-regulation of these molecules has been demonstrated to be both desirable and detrimental following CNS injury. Taking cues from arthritis, where there is a strong anti-CSPG immune response, there is evidence that suggests that CSPGs may influence immunity during CNS pathological conditions. This review focuses on the role of CSPGs in CNS pathologies as well as in immunity, both from a viewpoint of how they may inhibit repair and exacerbate damage in the CNS, and how they are involved in activation and function of peripheral immune cells, particularly in multiple sclerosis. Lastly, we address how CSPGs may be manipulated to improve disease outcomes.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

Experimental Demyelination and Remyelination of Murine Spinal Cord by Focal Injection of Lysolecithin

Michael B. Keough; Samuel K. Jensen; V. Wee Yong

Multiple sclerosis is an inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system characterized by plaque formation containing lost oligodendrocytes, myelin, axons, and neurons. Remyelination is an endogenous repair mechanism whereby new myelin is produced subsequent to proliferation, recruitment, and differentiation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells into myelin-forming oligodendrocytes, and is necessary to protect axons from further damage. Currently, all therapeutics for the treatment of multiple sclerosis target the aberrant immune component of the disease, which reduce inflammatory relapses but do not prevent progression to irreversible neurological decline. It is therefore imperative that remyelination-promoting strategies be developed which may delay disease progression and perhaps reverse neurological symptoms. Several animal models of demyelination exist, including experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and curprizone; however, there are limitations in their use for studying remyelination. A more robust approach is the focal injection of toxins into the central nervous system, including the detergent lysolecithin into the spinal cord white matter of rodents. In this protocol, we demonstrate that the surgical procedure involved in injecting lysolecithin into the ventral white matter of mice is fast, cost-effective, and requires no additional materials than those commercially available. This procedure is important not only for studying the normal events involved in the remyelination process, but also as a pre-clinical tool for screening candidate remyelination-promoting therapeutics.

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