Murmu Reena Prity, Li Wen, Szepesi Zsuzsanna, Li Jia-Yi
Neural Plasticity and Repair Unit, Wallenberg Neuroscience Center, Department of Experimental Medical Sciences, Lund University, BMC A10, 22184 Lund, Sweden, and.
Neural Plasticity and Repair Unit, Wallenberg Neuroscience Center, Department of Experimental Medical Sciences, Lund University, BMC A10, 22184 Lund, Sweden, and Neuroscience Institute, College of Life and Health Sciences, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110015, People's Republic of China
J Neurosci. 2015 Jan 7;35(1):287-98. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0244-14.2015.
A key question in Huntington's disease (HD) is what underlies the early cognitive deficits that precede the motor symptoms and the characteristic neuronal death observed in HD. The mechanisms underlying cognitive symptoms in HD remain unknown. Postmortem HD brain and animal model studies demonstrate pathologies in dendritic spines and abnormal synaptic plasticity before motor symptoms and neurodegeneration. Experience-dependent synaptic plasticity caused by mechanisms such as LTP or novel sensory experience potentiates synaptic strength, enhances new dendritic spine formation and stabilization, and may contribute to normal cognitive processes, such as learning and memory. We have previously reported that under baseline conditions (without any sensory manipulation) neuronal circuitry in HD (R6/2 mouse model) was highly unstable, which led to a progressive loss of persistent spines in these mice, and that mutant huntingtin was directly involved in the process. Here, we investigated whether pathological processes of HD interfere with the normal experience-dependent plasticity of dendritic spines in the R6/2 model. Six weeks of two-photon in vivo imaging before and after whisker trimming revealed that sensory deprivation exacerbates loss of persistent-type, stable spines in R6/2 mice compared with wild-type littermates. In addition, sensory deprivation leads to impaired transformation of newly generated spines into persistent spines in R6/2 mice. As a consequence, reduced synaptic density and decreased PSD-95 protein levels are evident in their barrel cortical neurons. These data suggest that mutant huntingtin is implicated in maladaptive synaptic plasticity, which could be one of the plausible mechanisms underlying early cognitive deficits in HD.
亨廷顿舞蹈症(HD)中的一个关键问题是,在HD中观察到的运动症状和特征性神经元死亡之前出现的早期认知缺陷的潜在原因是什么。HD中认知症状的潜在机制仍然未知。HD患者的尸检大脑和动物模型研究表明,在运动症状和神经退行性变之前,树突棘存在病变且突触可塑性异常。由长时程增强(LTP)或新的感觉经验等机制引起的经验依赖性突触可塑性可增强突触强度,促进新的树突棘形成和稳定,并可能有助于正常的认知过程,如学习和记忆。我们之前报道过,在基线条件下(无任何感觉操作),HD(R6/2小鼠模型)的神经回路高度不稳定,这导致这些小鼠中持续性棘突逐渐丧失,并且突变型亨廷顿蛋白直接参与了这一过程。在此,我们研究了HD的病理过程是否会干扰R6/2模型中树突棘正常的经验依赖性可塑性。在修剪触须前后进行六周的双光子体内成像显示,与野生型同窝小鼠相比,感觉剥夺会加剧R6/2小鼠中持续性、稳定型棘突的丧失。此外,感觉剥夺导致R6/2小鼠中新生成的棘突向持续性棘突的转化受损。结果,其桶状皮质神经元中的突触密度降低且PSD-95蛋白水平下降明显。这些数据表明,突变型亨廷顿蛋白与适应不良的突触可塑性有关,这可能是HD早期认知缺陷的一个合理潜在机制。