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Brain Vol. 128 No. 1 © Guarantors of Brain 2005; all rights reserved
Scientific Commentary |
Sodium channel blockers and axonal protection in neuroinflammatory disease
Although demyelination is a cardinal feature of neuroinflammatory conditions such as GuillainBarré syndrome (GBS) and multiple sclerosis, axonal degeneration also occurs in these disorders. Because loss of axons causes permanent, non-remitting loss of neurological function, there is substantial interest in protection of axons in these situations. Protection of axons within white matter and peripheral nerves, however, is likely to require strategies different from those that might be expected to be protective in grey matter of the nervous system; the higher surface-to-volume ratio and different complement of molecules that are expressed in axons compared with neuronal cell bodies imply that the molecular mechanisms underlying axonal degeneration are different from those that cause neurons to die. Studies over the past decade have demonstrated that a sustained sodium influx through voltage-gated sodium channels can trigger reverse sodiumcalcium exchange which imports damaging levels of calcium into axons after they are exposed to insults such as anoxia, thereby activating injurious calcium-mediated processes (Stys et al., 1992a
The observations summarized above are consistent with the idea that a direct therapeutic effect on axons, via the blockade of axonal sodium channels, is responsible for the protective effect of sodium channel blockers in these models of neuroinflammatory disease. Supporting this suggestion, a protective effect of sodium channel blockade was observed even when administration of phenytoin and flecainide was delayed until 710 days after disease induction in EAE (Lo et al., 2002
, 2003
; Bechtold et al., 2004
) or until onset of disease in EAN (Bechtold et al., 2005
).
It is also possible, however, that sodium channel blockade has other effects on other cellular targets which can ameliorate the disease process in multiple sclerosis and GBS and their models. It is well established that the expression of sodium channels is not confined to excitable cells. Although perhaps not intuitive, since the role of sodium channels has classically been thought to be electrogenesis, sodium channels are present and functional within the membranes of Schwann cells and astrocytes (Sontheimer et al., 1996
), raising the possibility that sodium channel blockade may alter the function of these cells in some way. Nav1.6 sodium channels are also present on immune cells, and recent studies indicate that these channels contribute to activation and phagocytic function of microglia and macrophages in EAE and multiple sclerosis (Craner et al., 2004c)
. These observations raise the possibility that sodium channel blockade may attenuate the inflammatory response in neuroinflammatory disorders such as GBS. It is interesting, in this respect, that Bechtold et al. (2005)
observed significantly fewer macrophages within the nerves of flecainide-treated rats with EAE.
Complicating the story still further, the expression of sodium channels is not static. On the contrary, it is highly dynamic, and recent studies have demonstrated that inflammation and inflammatory mediators can upregulate the expression of sodium channels. Thus, the expression of Nav1.6 sodium channels is substantially increased in activated microglia and macrophages in both EAE and MS (Craner et al., 2004c)
. Moreover, expression of the Nav1.9 sodium channel, which is expressed along small diameter axons within the PNS (Dib-Hajj et al., 1998
; Fang et al., 2002
), where it provides a route for a persistent sodium current (Cummins et al., 1999
), is upregulated by inflammatory mediators such as the prostaglandin PGE2 (Rush and Waxman, 2004
). These latter results suggest the possibility that inflammation may trigger increases in the number of sodium channels that are deployed within immune cells and/or along axons, where they could contribute to the pathophysiology of inflammatory damage.
Despite the converging evidence for a protective effect of sodium channel blockers in neuroinflammatory disorders, important questions remain to be answered. Paramount among these questions is whether, and how, sodium channel blockers affect lymphocytes and other immune cells. Delineation of the mechanisms underlying the therapeutic effect of sodium channel blockers (neuroprotection versus immunomodulation) is especially important, since, if these drugs act predominantly by the first mechanism, the effects might be therapeutically additive to those of currently used immunomodulatory drugs. The precise nature of the immunomodulatory effect of sodium channel blockers (if any) also deserves study, and may be relevant to the question of whether these drugs can be used together with other immunomodulatory or immunosuppressive agents. Irrespective of the underlying molecular mechanisms, the new results in EAN, when juxtaposed to earlier results in EAE and other models, support the idea that sodium channels participate in the molecular cascade(s) leading to axonal degeneration in multiple sclerosis and GBS, and indicate that sodium channel blockers deserve further study as potential protective agents in neuro-inflammatory disorders.
Department of Neurology and The Center for Neuroscience and Regeneration Research, Yale School of Medicine,New Haven, CT 06520, and Rehabilitation Research Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare, West Haven, CT 06516, USA
Correspondence to: Stephen G. Waxman, MD, PhD, Department of Neurology, LCI 707, Yale Medical School, 333 Cedar Street, PO Box 208018, New Haven, CT 06520-8018, USA E-mail: Stephen.Waxman{at}yale.edu
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