Okada Starlyn L M, Stivers Nicole S, Stys Peter K, Stirling David P
KY Spinal Cord Injury Research Center, Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Louisville.
Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary.
J Vis Exp. 2014 Nov 25(93):e52173. doi: 10.3791/52173.
Injured CNS axons fail to regenerate and often retract away from the injury site. Axons spared from the initial injury may later undergo secondary axonal degeneration. Lack of growth cone formation, regeneration, and loss of additional myelinated axonal projections within the spinal cord greatly limits neurological recovery following injury. To assess how central myelinated axons of the spinal cord respond to injury, we developed an ex vivo living spinal cord model utilizing transgenic mice that express yellow fluorescent protein in axons and a focal and highly reproducible laser-induced spinal cord injury to document the fate of axons and myelin (lipophilic fluorescent dye Nile Red) over time using two-photon excitation time-lapse microscopy. Dynamic processes such as acute axonal injury, axonal retraction, and myelin degeneration are best studied in real-time. However, the non-focal nature of contusion-based injuries and movement artifacts encountered during in vivo spinal cord imaging make differentiating primary and secondary axonal injury responses using high resolution microscopy challenging. The ex vivo spinal cord model described here mimics several aspects of clinically relevant contusion/compression-induced axonal pathologies including axonal swelling, spheroid formation, axonal transection, and peri-axonal swelling providing a useful model to study these dynamic processes in real-time. Major advantages of this model are excellent spatiotemporal resolution that allows differentiation between the primary insult that directly injures axons and secondary injury mechanisms; controlled infusion of reagents directly to the perfusate bathing the cord; precise alterations of the environmental milieu (e.g., calcium, sodium ions, known contributors to axonal injury, but near impossible to manipulate in vivo); and murine models also offer an advantage as they provide an opportunity to visualize and manipulate genetically identified cell populations and subcellular structures. Here, we describe how to isolate and image the living spinal cord from mice to capture dynamics of acute axonal injury.
受损的中枢神经系统轴突无法再生,且常常从损伤部位缩回。最初未受损伤的轴突随后可能会发生继发性轴突变性。脊髓内生长锥形成障碍、再生受阻以及额外有髓轴突投射的丧失,极大地限制了损伤后的神经功能恢复。为了评估脊髓中枢有髓轴突对损伤的反应,我们利用在轴突中表达黄色荧光蛋白的转基因小鼠,开发了一种体外活脊髓模型,并采用局灶性且高度可重复的激光诱导脊髓损伤,通过双光子激发延时显微镜来记录轴突和髓磷脂(亲脂性荧光染料尼罗红)随时间的变化情况。急性轴突损伤、轴突回缩和髓磷脂变性等动态过程最好进行实时研究。然而,基于挫伤的损伤具有非局灶性,且在体内脊髓成像过程中会遇到运动伪影,这使得使用高分辨率显微镜区分原发性和继发性轴突损伤反应具有挑战性。这里描述的体外脊髓模型模拟了临床相关挫伤/压迫诱导的轴突病变的几个方面,包括轴突肿胀、球体形成、轴突横断和轴突周围肿胀,为实时研究这些动态过程提供了一个有用的模型。该模型的主要优点包括出色的时空分辨率,能够区分直接损伤轴突的原发性损伤和继发性损伤机制;可将试剂直接精确注入灌注液中以浸泡脊髓;能精确改变环境介质(例如钙离子、钠离子,这些是已知的轴突损伤因素,但在体内几乎无法操控);并且小鼠模型还具有优势,因为它们提供了可视化和操控基因鉴定的细胞群体及亚细胞结构的机会。在此,我们描述了如何从小鼠中分离并对活脊髓进行成像,以捕捉急性轴突损伤的动态过程。