McAllister Brendan B, Spanswick Simon C, Patel Payal P, Barneto Alison A, Dyck Richard H
Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Behav Brain Res. 2015 Sep 1;290:102-16. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2015.04.049. Epub 2015 May 5.
Injury of the brain is a leading cause of long-term disability. Recent evidence indicates that the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor drug fluoxetine may be beneficial when administered following brain injury. However, its potential to promote recovery and the mechanisms by which it might do so require further characterization. In the present experiment, fluoxetine was administered to mice for 4 weeks following injury of medial frontal cortex (MFC). MFC injury altered behavior, reducing locomotion, decreasing swim speed in the Morris water task, and decreasing anxiety-like behavior in the elevated plus maze. Fluoxetine treatment did not affect these behavioral alterations, but it did increase the social dominance of the injured mice, as assessed by the tube test. Fluoxetine treatment also hastened learning of a T-maze position discrimination task, independently of lesion condition. Anatomically, fluoxetine failed to decrease lesion size, increase the survival of cells born 1-week post injury in the hippocampal dentate gyrus, or reverse the reduction in spine density in layer II/III pyramidal neurons in cingulate cortex caused by the lesions. Fluoxetine did, however, increase the dendritic arborization of these cells, which was reduced in the mice with lesions. Thus, while not all the effects of MFC injury were ameliorated, the behavioral outcome of mice with MFC injuries was improved, and one of the neuroanatomical sequelae of the lesions counteracted, by chronic fluoxetine, further contributing to the evidence that fluoxetine could be a useful treatment following brain injury.
脑损伤是导致长期残疾的主要原因。最近的证据表明,选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂药物氟西汀在脑损伤后给药可能有益。然而,其促进恢复的潜力以及可能的作用机制需要进一步明确。在本实验中,内侧前额叶皮质(MFC)损伤后,对小鼠给予氟西汀治疗4周。MFC损伤改变了行为,减少了运动能力,降低了在莫里斯水迷宫任务中的游泳速度,并减少了高架十字迷宫中的焦虑样行为。氟西汀治疗并未影响这些行为改变,但通过管测试评估,它确实增加了受伤小鼠的社会优势。氟西汀治疗还加速了T迷宫位置辨别任务的学习,且与损伤情况无关。在解剖学上,氟西汀未能减小损伤大小,未能增加损伤后1周海马齿状回中新生细胞的存活率,也未能逆转由损伤导致的扣带回皮质II/III层锥体神经元棘密度的降低。然而,氟西汀确实增加了这些细胞的树突分支,而在有损伤的小鼠中树突分支减少。因此,虽然MFC损伤的所有影响并未得到改善,但慢性氟西汀改善了MFC损伤小鼠的行为结果,并抵消了损伤的一种神经解剖学后遗症,进一步证明氟西汀可能是脑损伤后一种有用的治疗方法。