Hasbani M J, Schlief M L, Fisher D A, Goldberg M P
Departments of Neurology and Anatomy and Neurobiology Center for the Study of Nervous System Injury, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA.
J Neurosci. 2001 Apr 1;21(7):2393-403. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.21-07-02393.2001.
During cerebral ischemia, neurons undergo rapid alterations in dendritic structure consisting of focal swelling and spine loss. We used time-lapse microscopy to determine the fate of dendritic spines that disappeared after brief, sublethal hypoxic or excitotoxic exposures. Dendrite and spine morphology were assessed in cultured cortical neurons expressing yellow fluorescent protein or labeled with the fluorescent membrane tracer, DiI. Neurons exposed to NMDA, kainate, or oxygen-glucose deprivation underwent segmental dendritic beading and loss of approximately one-half of dendritic spines. Most spine loss was observed in regions of local dendritic swelling. Despite widespread loss, spines recovered within 2 hr after termination of agonist exposure or oxygen-glucose deprivation and remained stable over the subsequent 24 hr. Recovery was slower after NMDA than AMPA/kainate receptor activation. Time-lapse fluorescence imaging showed that the vast majority of spines reemerged in the same location from which they disappeared. In addition to spine recovery, elaboration of dendritic filopodia was observed in new locations along the dendritic shaft after dendrite recovery. Spine recovery did not depend on actin polymerization because it was not blocked by application of latrunculin-A, which eliminated filamentous actin staining in spines and blocked spine motility. Throughout spine loss and recovery, presynaptic and postsynaptic elements remained in physical proximity. These results suggest that elimination of dendritic spines is not necessarily associated with loss of synaptic contacts. Rapid reestablishment of dendritic spine synapses in surviving neurons may be a substrate for functional recovery after transient cerebral ischemia.
在脑缺血期间,神经元的树突结构会迅速发生改变,包括局部肿胀和棘突丧失。我们使用延时显微镜来确定在短暂的亚致死性缺氧或兴奋性毒性暴露后消失的树突棘的命运。在表达黄色荧光蛋白或用荧光膜示踪剂DiI标记的培养皮质神经元中评估树突和棘突形态。暴露于N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)、红藻氨酸或氧-葡萄糖剥夺的神经元经历了节段性树突串珠形成以及约一半树突棘的丧失。在局部树突肿胀区域观察到大多数棘突丧失。尽管棘突广泛丧失,但在激动剂暴露或氧-葡萄糖剥夺终止后2小时内棘突恢复,并且在随后的24小时内保持稳定。NMDA受体激活后棘突恢复比α-氨基-3-羟基-5-甲基-4-异恶唑丙酸(AMPA)/红藻氨酸受体激活后更慢。延时荧光成像显示,绝大多数棘突在其消失的同一位置重新出现。除了棘突恢复外,在树突恢复后沿着树突轴的新位置观察到树突丝状伪足的形成。棘突恢复不依赖于肌动蛋白聚合,因为它不会被应用拉特罗毒素A所阻断,拉特罗毒素A消除了棘突中的丝状肌动蛋白染色并阻断了棘突运动。在整个棘突丧失和恢复过程中,突触前和突触后元件在物理上保持接近。这些结果表明,树突棘的消除不一定与突触联系的丧失相关。存活神经元中树突棘突触的快速重建可能是短暂性脑缺血后功能恢复的一个基础。