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Astrocytes are an important cell population in the CNS, involved in cytokine homeostasis and participating in a variety of important physiological and pathological processes. In the present study we showed that primary cultures of neonatal mouse cortical astrocytes stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (Balb/c mice strain, LPS: 1 microgram/ml, 18 h) or Theiler's virus, TMEV (SJL/J mice strain, TMEV: 10(5) PFU/well, 24 h) released an increased amount of nitrites (NO2-) and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) into the culture medium. Exogenous cannabinoids are known to modulate the function of immune cells. Anandamide, an endogenous ligand for the cannabinoid receptor, blocked the release of NO2- and TNF-alpha induced by LPS in a dose-dependent manner. In TMEV-stimulated astrocytes anandamide also suppressed, in a dose-related manner, the stimulatory effects of TMEV on both NO2- and TNF-alpha. It is suggested that anandamide exerts an immunoregulatory role in the CNS. These results could have important implications in the modulation of immunological and inflammatory processes by cannabinoid agents.
Molina‐Holgado et al. (Thu,) studied this question.