Samal Babru B, Waites Cameron K, Almeida-Suhett Camila, Li Zheng, Marini Ann M, Samal Nihar R, Elkahloun Abdel, Braga Maria F M, Eiden Lee E
Section on Molecular Neuroscience, Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Regulation, National Institute of Mental Health, Building 49, Room 5A-38, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD, 20892, USA.
Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Genetics, F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine, Bethesda, MD, USA.
J Mol Neurosci. 2015 Oct;57(2):282-303. doi: 10.1007/s12031-015-0626-2. Epub 2015 Aug 29.
We have previously demonstrated that mild controlled cortical impact (mCCI) injury to rat cortex causes indirect, concussive injury to underlying hippocampus and other brain regions, providing a reproducible model for mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and its neurochemical, synaptic, and behavioral sequelae. Here, we extend a preliminary gene expression study of the hippocampus-specific events occurring after mCCI and identify 193 transcripts significantly upregulated, and 21 transcripts significantly downregulated, 24 h after mCCI. Fifty-three percent of genes altered by mCCI within 24 h of injury are predicted to be expressed only in the non-neuronal/glial cellular compartment, with only 13% predicted to be expressed only in neurons. The set of upregulated genes following mCCI was interrogated using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) augmented with manual curation of the literature (190 transcripts accepted for analysis), revealing a core group of 15 first messengers, mostly inflammatory cytokines, predicted to account for >99% of the transcript upregulation occurring 24 h after mCCI. Convergent analysis of predicted transcription factors (TFs) regulating the mCCI target genes, carried out in IPA relative to the entire Affymetrix-curated transcriptome, revealed a high concordance with TFs regulated by the cohort of 15 cytokines/cytokine-like messengers independently accounting for upregulation of the mCCI transcript cohort. TFs predicted to regulate transcription of the 193-gene mCCI cohort also displayed a high degree of overlap with TFs predicted to regulate glia-, rather than neuron-specific genes in cortical tissue. We conclude that mCCI predominantly affects transcription of non-neuronal genes within the first 24 h after insult. This finding suggests that early non-neuronal events trigger later permanent neuronal changes after mTBI, and that early intervention after mTBI could potentially affect the neurochemical cascade leading to later reported synaptic and behavioral dysfunction.
我们之前已经证明,对大鼠皮层进行轻度控制性皮质撞击(mCCI)损伤会对其下方的海马体和其他脑区造成间接的震荡性损伤,从而为轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)及其神经化学、突触和行为后遗症提供了一个可重复的模型。在此,我们扩展了一项关于mCCI后海马体特异性事件的初步基因表达研究,并确定了mCCI后24小时有193个转录本显著上调,21个转录本显著下调。在损伤后24小时内,mCCI改变的基因中有53%预计仅在非神经元/神经胶质细胞区室中表达,只有13%预计仅在神经元中表达。使用Ingenuity Pathway Analysis(IPA)并结合文献的人工整理(190个转录本被接受用于分析)对mCCI后上调的基因集进行了研究,发现一组核心的15种第一信使,主要是炎性细胞因子,预计占mCCI后24小时发生的转录本上调的>99%。在IPA中相对于整个Affymetrix整理的转录组对预测调节mCCI靶基因的转录因子(TFs)进行的收敛分析,显示与由15种细胞因子/细胞因子样信使组成的队列调节的TFs高度一致,这些信使独立地导致了mCCI转录本队列的上调。预计调节193个基因的mCCI队列转录的TFs也与预计调节皮质组织中胶质细胞而非神经元特异性基因的TFs有高度重叠。我们得出结论,mCCI在损伤后的最初24小时内主要影响非神经元基因的转录。这一发现表明,早期的非神经元事件会在mTBI后引发后期永久性的神经元变化,并且mTBI后的早期干预可能会潜在地影响导致后期报道的突触和行为功能障碍的神经化学级联反应。