Dikranian K, Cohen R, Mac Donald C, Pan Y, Brakefield D, Bayly P, Parsadanian A
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University, St. Louis, 660 S. Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Exp Neurol. 2008 Jun;211(2):551-60. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2008.03.012. Epub 2008 Mar 21.
The immature brain in the first several years of childhood is very vulnerable to trauma. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) during this critical period often leads to neuropathological and cognitive impairment. Previous experimental studies in rodent models of infant TBI were mostly concentrated on neuronal degeneration, while axonal injury and its relationship to cell death have attracted much less attention. To address this, we developed a closed controlled head injury model in infant (P7) mice and characterized the temporospatial pattern of axonal degeneration and neuronal cell death in the brain following mild injury. Using amyloid precursor protein (APP) as marker of axonal injury we found that mild head trauma causes robust axonal degeneration in the cingulum/external capsule as early as 30 min post-impact. These levels of axonal injury persisted throughout a 24 h period, but significantly declined by 48 h. During the first 24 h injured axons underwent significant and rapid pathomorphological changes. Initial small axonal swellings evolved into larger spheroids and club-like swellings indicating the early disconnection of axons. Ultrastructural analysis revealed compaction of organelles, axolemmal and cytoskeletal defects. Axonal degeneration was followed by profound apoptotic cell death in the posterior cingulate and retrosplenial cortex and anterior thalamus which peaked between 16 and 24 h post-injury. At early stages post-injury no evidence of excitotoxic neuronal death at the impact site was found. At 48 h apoptotic cell death was reduced and paralleled with the reduction in the number of APP-labeled axonal profiles. Our data suggest that early degenerative response to injury in axons of the cingulum and external capsule may cause disconnection between cortical and thalamic neurons, and lead to their delayed apoptotic death.
儿童期最初几年的未成熟大脑极易受到创伤。在这一关键时期发生的创伤性脑损伤(TBI)通常会导致神经病理学和认知功能障碍。以往在婴儿TBI啮齿动物模型中的实验研究大多集中在神经元变性上,而轴突损伤及其与细胞死亡的关系则很少受到关注。为了解决这个问题,我们在幼鼠(P7)中建立了一种闭合性控制性头部损伤模型,并对轻度损伤后脑内轴突变性和神经元细胞死亡的时空模式进行了表征。以淀粉样前体蛋白(APP)作为轴突损伤的标志物,我们发现轻度头部创伤在撞击后30分钟就会导致扣带/外囊区出现强烈的轴突变性。这些轴突损伤水平在24小时内持续存在,但在48小时时显著下降。在最初的24小时内,受损轴突发生了显著而快速的病理形态学变化。最初的小轴突肿胀演变成更大的球体和棒状肿胀,表明轴突早期断开连接。超微结构分析显示细胞器致密化、轴膜和细胞骨架缺陷。轴突变性之后,后扣带回、压后皮质和前丘脑出现了严重的凋亡性细胞死亡,在损伤后16至24小时达到峰值。在损伤早期,未发现撞击部位有兴奋性毒性神经元死亡的证据。在48小时时,凋亡性细胞死亡减少,且与APP标记的轴突轮廓数量减少平行。我们的数据表明,扣带和外囊轴突对损伤的早期退行性反应可能导致皮质和丘脑神经元之间的连接中断,并导致它们延迟凋亡死亡。