Phillip G. Popovich
Ohio State University
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Featured researches published by Phillip G. Popovich.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009
Kristina A. Kigerl; John C. Gensel; Daniel P. Ankeny; Jessica K. Alexander; Phillip G. Popovich
Macrophages dominate sites of CNS injury in which they promote both injury and repair. These divergent effects may be caused by distinct macrophage subsets, i.e., “classically activated” proinflammatory (M1) or “alternatively activated” anti-inflammatory (M2) cells. Here, we show that an M1 macrophage response is rapidly induced and then maintained at sites of traumatic spinal cord injury and that this response overwhelms a comparatively smaller and transient M2 macrophage response. The high M1/M2 macrophage ratio has significant implications for CNS repair. Indeed, we present novel data showing that only M1 macrophages are neurotoxic and M2 macrophages promote a regenerative growth response in adult sensory axons, even in the context of inhibitory substrates that dominate sites of CNS injury (e.g., proteoglycans and myelin). Together, these data suggest that polarizing the differentiation of resident microglia and infiltrating blood monocytes toward an M2 or “alternatively” activated macrophage phenotype could promote CNS repair while limiting secondary inflammatory-mediated injury.
The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1997
Phillip G. Popovich; Ping Wei; Bradford T. Stokes
The distribution of microglia, macrophages, T‐lymphocytes, and astrocytes was characterized throughout a spinal contusion lesion in Sprague‐Dawley and Lewis rats by using immunohistochemistry. The morphology, spatial localization, and activation state of these inflammatory cells were described both qualitatively and quantitatively at 12 hours, 3, 7, 14, and 28 days after injury. By use of OX42 and ED1 antibodies, peak microglial activation was observed within the lesion epicenter of both rat strains between three and seven days post‐injury preceding the bulk of monocyte influx and macrophage activation (seven days). Rostral and caudal to the injury site, microglial activation plateaued between two and four weeks post‐injury in the dorsal and lateral funiculi as indicated by morphological transformation and the de‐novo expression of major histocompatibility class II (MHC II) molecules. Similar to the timing of microglial reactions, T‐lymphocytes maximally infiltrated the lesion epicenter between three and seven days post‐injury. Reactive astrocytes, while present in the acute lesion, were more prominent at later survival times (7–28 days). These cells were interspersed with activated microglia but appeared to surround and enclose tissue sites occupied by reactive microglia and phagocytic macrophages. Thus, trauma‐induced central nervous system (CNS) inflammation, regardless of strain, occurs rapidly at the site of injury and involves the activation of resident and recruited immune cells. In regions rostral or caudal to the epicenter, prolonged activation of inflammatory cells occurs preferentially in white matter and primarily consists of activated microglia and astrocytes.
Experimental Neurology | 1999
Phillip G. Popovich; Zhen Guan; Ping Wei; Inge Huitinga; Nico van Rooijen; Bradford T. Stokes
Traumatic injury to the spinal cord initiates a series of destructive cellular processes which accentuate tissue damage at and beyond the original site of trauma. The cellular inflammatory response has been implicated as one mechanism of secondary degeneration. Of the various leukocytes present in the spinal cord after injury, macrophages predominate. Through the release of chemicals and enzymes involved in host defense, macrophages can damage neurons and glia. However, macrophages are also essential for the reconstruction of injured tissues. This apparent dichotomy in macrophage function is further complicated by the overlapping influences of resident microglial-derived macrophages and those phagocytes that are derived from peripheral sources. To clarify the role macrophages play in posttraumatic secondary degeneration, we selectively depleted peripheral macrophages in spinal-injured rats during a time when inflammation has been shown to be maximal. Standardized behavioral and neuropathological analyses (open-field locomotor function, morphometric analysis of the injured spinal cord) were used to evaluate the efficacy of this treatment. Beginning 24 h after injury and then again at days 3 and 6 postinjury, spinal cord-injured rats received intravenous injections of liposome-encapsulated clodronate to deplete peripheral macrophages. Within the spinal cords of rats treated in this fashion, macrophage infiltration was significantly reduced at the site of impact. These animals showed marked improvement in hindlimb usage during overground locomotion. Behavioral recovery was paralleled by a significant preservation of myelinated axons, decreased cavitation in the rostrocaudal axis of the spinal cord, and enhanced sprouting and/or regeneration of axons at the site of injury. These data implicate hematogenous (blood-derived) macrophages as effectors of acute secondary injury. Furthermore, given the selective nature of the depletion regimen and its proven efficacy when administered after injury, cell-specific immunomodulation may prove useful as an adjunct therapy after spinal cord injury.
Experimental Neurology | 2008
Phillip G. Popovich
Trauma to the central nervous system (CNS) triggers intraparenchymal inflammation and activation of systemic immunity with the capacity to exacerbate neuropathology and stimulate mechanisms of tissue repair. Despite our incomplete understanding of the mechanisms that control these divergent functions, immune-based therapies are becoming a therapeutic focus. This review will address the complexities and controversies of post-traumatic neuroinflammation, particularly in spinal cord. In addition, current therapies designed to target neuroinflammatory cascades will be discussed.
Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2011
Andrew D. Gaudet; Phillip G. Popovich; Matt S. Ramer
In this review, we first provide a brief historical perspective, discussing how peripheral nerve injury (PNI) may have caused World War I. We then consider the initiation, progression, and resolution of the cellular inflammatory response after PNI, before comparing the PNI inflammatory response with that induced by spinal cord injury (SCI).In contrast with central nervous system (CNS) axons, those in the periphery have the remarkable ability to regenerate after injury. Nevertheless, peripheral nervous system (PNS) axon regrowth is hampered by nerve gaps created by injury. In addition, the growth-supportive milieu of PNS axons is not sustained over time, precluding long-distance regeneration. Therefore, studying PNI could be instructive for both improving PNS regeneration and recovery after CNS injury. In addition to requiring a robust regenerative response from the injured neuron itself, successful axon regeneration is dependent on the coordinated efforts of non-neuronal cells which release extracellular matrix molecules, cytokines, and growth factors that support axon regrowth. The inflammatory response is initiated by axonal disintegration in the distal nerve stump: this causes blood-nerve barrier permeabilization and activates nearby Schwann cells and resident macrophages via receptors sensitive to tissue damage. Denervated Schwann cells respond to injury by shedding myelin, proliferating, phagocytosing debris, and releasing cytokines that recruit blood-borne monocytes/macrophages. Macrophages take over the bulk of phagocytosis within days of PNI, before exiting the nerve by the circulation once remyelination has occurred. The efficacy of the PNS inflammatory response (although transient) stands in stark contrast with that of the CNS, where the response of nearby cells is associated with inhibitory scar formation, quiescence, and degeneration/apoptosis. Rather than efficiently removing debris before resolving the inflammatory response as in other tissues, macrophages infiltrating the CNS exacerbate cell death and damage by releasing toxic pro-inflammatory mediators over an extended period of time. Future research will help determine how to manipulate PNS and CNS inflammatory responses in order to improve tissue repair and functional recovery.
Experimental Neurology | 1998
Wolfgang J. Streit; Susan L. Semple-Rowland; Sean D. Hurley; Rehae Miller; Phillip G. Popovich; Bradford T. Stokes
We have studied temporal mRNA expression patterns for interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-6 (IL-6), macrophage colony stimulating factor (M-CSF), and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) in two rat injury paradigms with very different cellular inflammatory reactions: contussion of the spinal cord and axotomy of the facial nerve. Our comparative analyses using semiquantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) show an early and robust upregulation of IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, IL-6, and M-CSF mRNAs in spinal cord after contusion injury. Peak expression of these mRNAs was transient and returned to control levels by 24 h postinjury. In contrast, expression of IL-1beta and TNF-alpha mRNAs in the axotomized facial nucleus was minimal and delayed, and levels of M-CSF mRNA remained unaltered. Similar to injured spinal cord, the axotomized nucleus showed a dramatic and early upregulation of IL-6 mRNA, but unlike spinal cord, IL-6 mRNA levels subsided only gradually. Both injury paradigms showed gradually increasing levels of TGF-beta1 mRNA which were maximal at 7 days postinjury. RT-PCR analyses were also performed on isolated blood-borne mononuclear cells and neutrophils. The results showed that these cells contain high levels of IL-1beta and M-CSF mRNAs, moderate levels of TGF-beta and TNF-alpha mRNAs, and minimal levels of IL-6 mRNA. The RT-PCR analyses together with histological observations indicate that expression of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-6 is short-lived and self-limited after contusion injury, and that it occurs primarily within endogenous glial cells. Transient expression of these molecules likely triggers secondary events which may be beneficial to wound repair and regeneration.
The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2003
J.M. Sroga; T. Bucky Jones; Kristina A. Kigerl; Violeta M. McGaughy; Phillip G. Popovich
Spinal contusion pathology in rats and mice is distinct. Cystic cavities form at the impact site in rats while a dense connective tissue matrix occupies the injury site in mice. Because inflammatory cells coordinate mechanisms of tissue injury and repair, we evaluated whether the unique anatomical presentation in spinally injured rats and mice is associated with a species‐specific inflammatory response. Immunohistochemistry was used to compare the leukocytic infiltrate between rats and mice. Microglia/macrophage reactions were similar between species; however, the onset and magnitude of lymphocyte and dendritic cell (DC) infiltration were markedly different. In rats, T‐cell numbers were highest between 3 and 7 days postinjury and declined by 50% over the next 3 weeks. In mice, significant T‐cell entry was not evident until 14 days postinjury, with T‐cell numbers doubling between 2 and 6 weeks. Dendritic cell influx paralleled T‐cell infiltration in rats but was absent in mouse spinal cord. De novo expression of major histocompatability class II molecules was increased in both species but to a greater extent in mice. Unique to mice were cells that resembled lymphocytes but did not express lymphocyte‐specific markers. These cells extended from blood vessels within the fibrotic tissue matrix and expressed fibronectin, collagen I, CD11b, CD34, CD13, and CD45. This phenotype is characteristic of fibrocytes, specialized blood‐borne cells involved in wound healing and immunity. Thus, species‐specific neuroinflammation may contribute to the formation of distinct tissue environments at the site of spinal cord injury in mice and rats. J. Comp. Neurol. 462:223–240, 2003.
Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2008
Phillip G. Popovich; Erin E. Longbrake
Experimental and clinical data have demonstrated that activating the immune system in the CNS can be destructive. However, other studies have shown that enhancing an immune response can be therapeutic, and several clinical trials have been initiated with the aim of boosting immune responses in the CNS of individuals with spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis and Alzheimers disease. Here, we evaluate the controversies in the field and discuss the remaining scientific challenges that are associated with enhancing immune function in the CNS to treat neurological diseases.
Journal of Neuroscience Research | 1996
Phillip G. Popovich; Bradford T. Stokes; Caroline C. Whitacre
The effect of immunological activation on the neuropathologic sequelae and neurologic outcome from spinal cord injury is unclear. Similar to models of neuroinflammatory disease (e.g., experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; EAE), injury to the spinal cord precipitates the activation of resident microglia and the recruitment of circulating inflammatory cells (e.g., macrophages and lymphocytes). In EAE, these cells are known to cause tissue damage and loss of neurological function via autoimmune reactions to myelin proteins. The role these cells play in the pathology of traumatic injury to the spinal cord has not been clarified. In this review, data are presented that indicate that T cells isolated from spinal‐injured rats are capable of causing neurologic deficits and histopathologic changes similar to EAE when injected intravenously into naive animals. These data are consistent with the concept of trauma‐induced autoimmune reactions. However, disease transfer was only possible when T cells were obtained from animals at 1 week post‐injury. Thus, the encephalitogenic T‐cell repertoire appears to be rapidly regulated. It is possible that trauma‐induced autoimmunity evolves into a mechanism by which the autoreactive repertoire regulates ongoing central nervous system (CNS) immunologic responses. Similar immunoregulatory networks have been proposed in EAE and are discussed here in the context of CNS trauma and neurodegenerative disease.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2007
Kristina A. Kigerl; Wenmin Lai; Serge Rivest; Ronald P. Hart; Abhay R. Satoskar; Phillip G. Popovich
Activation of macrophages via toll‐like receptors (TLRs) is important for inflammation and host defense against pathogens. Recent data suggest that non‐pathogenic molecules released by trauma also can trigger inflammation via TLR2 and TLR4. Here, we tested whether TLRs are regulated after sterile spinal cord injury (SCI) and examined their effects on functional and anatomical recovery. We show that mRNA for TLR1, 2, 4, 5, and 7 are increased after SCI as are molecules associated with TLR signaling (e.g. MyD88, NFκB). The significance of in vivo TLR2 and TLR4 signaling was evident in SCI TLR4 mutant (C3H/HeJ) and TLR2 knockout (TLR2−/−) mice. In C3H/HeJ mice, sustained locomotor deficits were observed relative to SCI wild‐type control mice and were associated with increased demyelination, astrogliosis, and macrophage activation. These changes were preceded by reduced intraspinal expression of interleukin‐1β mRNA. In TLR2−/− mice, locomotor recovery also was impaired relative to SCI wild‐type controls and novel patterns of myelin pathology existed within ventromedial white matter – an area important for overground locomotion. Together, these data suggest that in the absence of pathogens, TLR2 and TLR4 are important for coordinating post‐injury sequelae and perhaps in regulating inflammation and gliosis after SCI.