Skip to Content
Merck
CN

Electroconvulsive stimulation attenuates chronic neuroinflammation.

JCI insight (2020-08-12)
Smadar Goldfarb, Nina Fainstein, Tamir Ben-Hur
ABSTRACT

Electroconvulsive therapy is highly effective in resistant depression by unknown mechanisms. Microglial toxicity was suggested to mediate depression and plays key roles in neuroinflammatory and degenerative diseases, where there is critical shortage in therapies. We examined the effects of electroconvulsive seizures (ECS) on chronic neuroinflammation and microglial neurotoxicity. Electric brain stimulation inducing full tonic-clonic seizures during chronic relapsing-progressive experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) reduced spinal immune cell infiltration, reduced myelin and axonal loss, and prevented clinical deterioration. Using the transfer EAE model, we examined the effect of ECS on systemic immune response in donor mice versus ECS effect on CNS innate immune activity in recipient mice. ECS did not affect encephalitogenicity of systemic T cells, but it targeted the CNS directly to inhibit T cell-induced neuroinflammation. In vivo and ex vivo assays indicated that ECS suppressed microglial neurotoxicity by reducing inducible NOS expression, nitric oxide, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and by reducing CNS oxidative stress. Microglia from ECS-treated EAE mice expressed less T cell stimulatory and chemoattractant factors. Our findings indicate that electroconvulsive therapy targets the CNS innate immune system to reduce neuroinflammation by attenuating microglial neurotoxicity. These findings signify a potentially novel therapeutic approach for chronic neuroinflammatory, neuropsychiatric, and neurodegenerative diseases.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Octoclothepin maleate salt, solid
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-NG2 Chondroitin Sulfate Proteoglycan Antibody, Chemicon®, from rabbit
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-NeuN Antibody, clone A60, clone A60, Chemicon®, from mouse
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Neurofilament M (145 kDa) Antibody, CT, serum, Chemicon®
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Myelin Basic Protein Antibody, a.a. 82-87, culture supernatant, clone 12, Chemicon®