Lo Albert C, Saab Carl Y, Black Joel A, Waxman Stephen G
Department of Neurology and Paralyzed Veterans Association/Eastern Paralyzed Veterans Association of America Neuroscience Research Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06510, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2003 Nov;90(5):3566-71. doi: 10.1152/jn.00434.2003. Epub 2003 Aug 6.
Axonal degeneration within the spinal cord contributes substantially to neurological disability in multiple sclerosis (MS). Thus neuroprotective therapies that preserve axons, so that they maintain their integrity and continue to function, might be expected to result in improved neurological outcome. Sodium channels are known to provide a route for sodium influx that can drive calcium influx, via reverse operation of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger, after injury to axons within the CNS, and sodium channel blockers have been shown to protect CNS axons from degeneration after experimental anoxic, traumatic, and nitric oxide (NO)-induced injury. In this study, we asked whether phenytoin, which is known to block sodium channels, can protect spinal cord axons from degeneration in mice with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE), which display substantial axonal degeneration and clinical paralysis. We demonstrate that the loss of dorsal corticospinal tract (63%) and dorsal column (cuneate fasciculus; 43%) axons in EAE is significantly ameliorated (corticospinal tract: 28%; cuneate fasciculus: 17%) by treatment with phenytoin. Spinal cord compound action potentials (CAP) were significantly attenuated in untreated EAE, whereas spinal cords from phenytoin-treated EAE had robust CAPs, similar to those from phenytoin-treated control mice. Clinical scores in phenytoin-treated EAE at 28 days were significantly improved (1.5, i.e., minor righting reflex abnormalities) compared with untreated EAE (3.8, i.e., near-complete hindlimb paralysis). Our results demonstrate that phenytoin has a protective effect in vivo on spinal cord axons, preventing their degeneration, maintaining their ability to conduct action potentials, and improving clinical status in a model of neuroinflammation.
脊髓内的轴突退化在多发性硬化症(MS)导致的神经功能障碍中起重要作用。因此,有望通过神经保护疗法来保护轴突,使其保持完整性并继续发挥功能,从而改善神经功能结局。已知钠通道为钠内流提供了一条途径,在中枢神经系统(CNS)内轴突损伤后,钠内流可通过钠/钙交换器的反向运作驱动钙内流,并且已经表明钠通道阻滞剂可保护中枢神经系统轴突在实验性缺氧、创伤和一氧化氮(NO)诱导的损伤后免于退化。在本研究中,我们探究了已知可阻断钠通道的苯妥英是否能保护实验性自身免疫性脑脊髓炎(EAE)小鼠的脊髓轴突免于退化,EAE小鼠表现出大量轴突退化和临床瘫痪。我们证明,用苯妥英治疗可显著改善EAE小鼠中皮质脊髓背束(63%)和背柱(楔束;43%)轴突的损失(皮质脊髓束:28%;楔束:17%)。未治疗的EAE小鼠的脊髓复合动作电位(CAP)显著减弱,而苯妥英治疗的EAE小鼠的脊髓具有强劲的CAP,类似于苯妥英治疗的对照小鼠。与未治疗的EAE(3.8,即接近完全后肢麻痹)相比,苯妥英治疗的EAE在28天时的临床评分显著改善(1.5,即轻微的翻正反射异常)。我们的结果表明,苯妥英在体内对脊髓轴突具有保护作用,可防止其退化,维持其传导动作电位的能力,并改善神经炎症模型中的临床状态。