Karuppagounder Saravanan S, Shi Qingli, Xu Hui, Gibson Gary E
Department of Neurology and Neuroscience, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, Burke Medical Research Institute, 785 Mamaroneck Avenue, White Plains, NY 10605, USA.
Neurobiol Dis. 2007 May;26(2):353-62. doi: 10.1016/j.nbd.2007.01.011. Epub 2007 Feb 8.
Abnormalities in oxidative metabolism and reductions of thiamine-dependent enzymes accompany many age-related neurodegenerative diseases. Thiamine deficiency (TD) produces a cascade of events including mild impairment of oxidative metabolism, activation of microglia, astrocytes and endothelial cells that leads to neuronal loss in select brain regions. The earliest changes occur in a small, well-defined brain region, the submedial thalamic nucleus (SmTN). In the present study, a micropunch technique was used to evaluate quantitatively the selective regional changes in mRNA and protein levels. To test whether this method can distinguish between changes in vulnerable and non-vulnerable regions, markers for neuronal loss (NeuN) and endothelial cells (eNOS) and inflammation (IL-1beta, IL-6 and TNF-alpha) in SmTN and cortex of control and TD mice were assessed. TD significantly reduced NeuN and increased CD11b, GFAP and ICAM-1 immunoreactivity in SmTN as revealed by immunocytochemistry. When assessed on samples obtained by the micropunch method, NeuN protein declined (-49%), while increased mRNA levels were observed for eNOS (3.7-fold), IL-1beta (43-fold), IL-6 (44-fold) and TNF-alpha (64-fold) in SmTN with TD. The only TD-induced change that occurred in cortex with TD was an increase in TNF-alpha (22-fold) mRNA levels. Immunocytochemical analysis revealed that IL-1beta, IL-6 and TNF-alpha protein levels increased in TD brains and colocalized with glial markers. The consistency of these quantitative results with immunocytochemical measurements validates the micropunch technique. The results demonstrate that TD induces quantitative, distinct inflammatory responses and oxidative stress in vulnerable and non-vulnerable regions that may underlie selective vulnerability.
氧化代谢异常和硫胺素依赖性酶的减少伴随着许多与年龄相关的神经退行性疾病。硫胺素缺乏(TD)会引发一系列事件,包括氧化代谢轻度受损、小胶质细胞、星形胶质细胞和内皮细胞激活,进而导致特定脑区的神经元丢失。最早的变化发生在一个小的、界限明确的脑区,即丘脑内侧核(SmTN)。在本研究中,采用微量打孔技术定量评估mRNA和蛋白质水平的选择性区域变化。为了测试该方法能否区分易损区域和非易损区域的变化,评估了对照小鼠和TD小鼠的SmTN及皮层中神经元丢失标志物(NeuN)、内皮细胞标志物(eNOS)和炎症标志物(IL-1β、IL-6和TNF-α)。免疫细胞化学显示,TD显著降低了SmTN中的NeuN,并增加了CD11b、GFAP和ICAM-1的免疫反应性。当通过微量打孔法对样本进行评估时,NeuN蛋白下降了(-49%),而在TD小鼠的SmTN中,eNOS(3.7倍)、IL-1β(43倍)、IL-6(44倍)和TNF-α(64倍)的mRNA水平升高。TD小鼠皮层中唯一由TD诱导的变化是TNF-α(22倍)mRNA水平升高。免疫细胞化学分析显示,TD脑内IL-1β、IL-6和TNF-α蛋白水平升高,并与胶质细胞标志物共定位。这些定量结果与免疫细胞化学测量结果的一致性验证了微量打孔技术。结果表明,TD在易损区域和非易损区域诱导了定量的、不同的炎症反应和氧化应激,这可能是选择性易损性的基础。