AI Article Synopsis

  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a serious autoimmune disease that causes damage to the central nervous system, leading to various neurological issues, and while current treatments work well for early stages, they're less effective for the later stage known as secondary progressive MS (SPMS).
  • This study investigates the drug siponimod, which affects specific receptors (sphingosine-1 phosphate receptors) and could help protect brain cells during SPMS by improving the function of glial cells, specifically oligodendrocytes.
  • The research showed that siponimod helped reduce damage in an animal model of MS by preserving oligodendrocytes and their protective role in myelin, indicating its potential benefits for various neurodegenerative diseases, not

Article Abstract

Multiple sclerosis (MS), an autoimmune-driven, inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system (CNS), causes irreversible accumulation of neurological deficits to a variable extent. Although there are potent disease-modifying agents for its initial relapsing-remitting phase, immunosuppressive therapies show limited efficacy in secondary progressive MS (SPMS). Although modulation of sphingosine-1 phosphate receptors has proven beneficial during SPMS, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. In this project, we followed the hypothesis that siponimod, a sphingosine-1 phosphate receptor modulator, exerts protective effects by direct modulation of glia cell function (i.e., either astrocytes, microglia, or oligodendrocytes). To this end, we used the toxin-mediated, nonautoimmune MS animal model of cuprizone (Cup) intoxication. On the histological level, siponimod ameliorated cuprizone-induced oligodendrocyte degeneration, demyelination, and axonal injury. Protective effects were evident as well using GE180 translocator protein 18-kDa (TSPO) imaging with positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) imaging or next generation sequencing (NGS). Siponimod also ameliorated the cuprizone-induced pathologies in -deficient mice, demonstrating that the protection is independent of T and B cell modulation. Proinflammatory responses in primary mixed astrocytes/microglia cell cultures were not modulated by siponimod, suggesting that other cell types than microglia and astrocytes are targeted. Of note, siponimod completely lost its protective effects in -deficient mice, suggesting direct protection of degenerating oligodendrocytes. Our study demonstrates that siponimod exerts protective effects in the brain in a S1PR5-dependent manner. This finding is not just relevant in the context of MS but in other neuropathologies as well, characterized by a degeneration of the axon-myelin unit.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9546621PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2204509119DOI Listing

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