An important step in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis is the adhesion and subsequent
transmigration of activated encephalitogenic CD4+ T cells across highly specialized
endothelial cells (EC) participating in the formation of the blood-brain-barrier.
Recruitment of CD4+ T cells across brain EC relies on interaction with EC-expressed
adhesion molecules that allow immune surveillance of the CNS, but also promote CNS
invasion by encephalitogenic T cells under inflammatory conditions.
Our results provide molecular evidence that the transcription factor peroxisome proliferator-activated
receptor gamma (PPARg) is a negative regulator of brain EC inflammation. PPARg activation
in brain ECs by the PPARg agonist pioglitazone significantly reduces transendothelial
migration of encephalitogenic T cells across TNFa-stimulated brain EC. This effect
is clearly PPARg mediated, as lentiviral PPARg overexpression in EC results in selective
abrogation of inflammation-induced T cell adhesion and subsequent transmigration,
but permits adhesion and transmigration of T cells under non-inflammatory conditions.
Moreover, PPARg overexpression in EC prevented TNFa-induced upregulation of the adhesion
molecules ICAM-1 and VCAM-1. We therefore propose that PPARg activation in EC selectively
curtails inflammation-induced EC-T cell interactions and may therefore be exploited
to selectively target detrimental EC-T cell interactions under inflammatory conditions.