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      An immunohistochemical, clinical and electroneuromyographic correlative study of the neural markers in the neuritic form of leprosy

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          Abstract

          The nerve biopsies of 11 patients with pure neuritic leprosy were submitted to routine diagnostic procedures and immunoperoxidase staining with antibodies against axonal (neurofilament, nerve growth factor receptor (NGFr), and protein gene product (PGP) 9.5) and Schwann cell (myelin basic protein, S-100 protein, and NGFr) markers. Two pairs of non-adjacent histological cross-sections of the peripheral nerve were removed for quantification. All the fascicles of the nerve were examined with a 10X-ocular and 40X-objective lens. The immunohistochemistry results were compared to the results of semithin section analysis and clinical and electroneuromyographic data. Neurofilament staining was reduced in 100% of the neuritic biopsies. NGFr positivity was also reduced in 81.8%, PGP staining in 100% of the affected nerves, S100 positivity in 90.9%, and myelin basic protein immunoreactivity in 90.9%. Hypoesthesia was associated with decreased NGFr (81.8%) and PGP staining (90.9%). Reduced potential amplitudes (electroneuromyographic data) were found to be associated with reduced PGP 9.5 (63.6%) and nerve fiber neurofilament staining (45.4%) by immunohistochemistry and with loss of myelinated fibers (100%) by semithin section analysis. On the other hand, the small fibers (immunoreactive dots) seen amid inflammatory cells continued to be present even after 40% of the larger myelinated fibers had disappeared. The present study shows an in-depth view of the destructive effects of leprosy upon the expression of neural markers and the integrity of nerve fiber. The association of these structural changes with the clinical and electroneuromyographic manifestations of leprosy peripheral neuropathy was also discussed.

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          Most cited references28

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          Formalin fixation for electron microscopy: a re-evaluation.

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            Ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase (PGP 9.5) is selectively present in ubiquitinated inclusion bodies characteristic of human neurodegenerative diseases.

            The recent discovery that brain PGP 9.5 is a ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase suggests that the role of this protein should be studied in relation to ubiquitinated cellular inclusions characteristic of several chronic human degenerative diseases. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-processed sections known to contain ubiquitin-protein conjugate immunoreactivity in cortical Lewy bodies, neurofibrillary tangles, Rosenthal fibres, Pick bodies, spinal inclusions in motor neurone disease, and Mallory's hyaline in alcoholic liver disease were immunostained to localize PGP 9.5. The majority of cortical Lewy bodies in diffuse Lewy body disease showed immunoreactivity for PGP 9.5. In Alzheimer's disease, only a minority of loosely arranged globose-type neurofibrillary tangles were immunostained together with a minority of neurites surrounding senile plaques. In cerebellar astrocytomas, the periphery of the majority of Rosenthal fibers was immunostained in addition to strong diffuse cytoplasmic immunostaining in some astrocytes lacking apparent Rosenthal fibers. In Pick's disease, there was no immunostaining of inclusions but there was intense immunostaining of swollen Pick cells. No spinal inclusions in motor neurone disease were stained; however, anterior horn neurones appear to show increased levels of PGP 9.5 compared with those from control cases. No immunostaining of hepatic Mallory's hyaline was demonstrable, which accords with suggestions that PGP 9.5 is a tissue-specific ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase isoenzyme. The differential detection of a ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase in different forms of ubiquitinated inclusion body in the nervous system may form the basis of a method for assessment of the staging of inclusion body biogenesis and give insight into the dynamics of inclusion body formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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              Contact-dependent demyelination by Mycobacterium leprae in the absence of immune cells.

              Demyelination results in severe disability in many neurodegenerative diseases and nervous system infections, and it is typically mediated by inflammatory responses. Mycobacterium leprae, the causative organism of leprosy, induced rapid demyelination by a contact-dependent mechanism in the absence of immune cells in an in vitro nerve tissue culture model and in Rag1-knockout (Rag1-/-) mice, which lack mature B and T lymphocytes. Myelinated Schwann cells were resistant to M. leprae invasion but undergo demyelination upon bacterial attachment, whereas nonmyelinated Schwann cells harbor intracellular M. leprae in large numbers. During M. leprae-induced demyelination, Schwann cells proliferate significantly both in vitro and in vivo and generate a more nonmyelinated phenotype, thereby securing the intracellular niche for M. leprae.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                bjmbr
                Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research
                Braz J Med Biol Res
                Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica (Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil )
                0100-879X
                1414-431X
                August 2006
                : 39
                : 8
                : 1071-1081
                Affiliations
                [01] orgnameFundação Oswaldo Cruz orgdiv1Laboratório de Hanseníase
                [02] Rio de Janeiro RJ orgnameFundação Oswaldo Cruz orgdiv1Departamento de Ultra-estrutura e Biologia Celular Brasil
                [03] Rio de Janeiro RJ orgnameUniversidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro orgdiv1Departamento de Patologia Brasil
                Article
                S0100-879X2006000800010 S0100-879X(06)03900810
                6d986eee-ecf8-49df-a173-2eb6477bc69e

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 20 April 2006
                : 28 November 2005
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 28, Pages: 11
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Infectious Agents and Diseases

                Nerve growth factor receptor,Peripheral neuropathy,Neuritic leprosy,Gene product 9.5,Myelin basic protein,S-100 protein,Neurofilament protein

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