Blaise Benjamin J, Schwendimann Leslie, Chhor Vibol, Degos Vincent, Hodson Mark P, Dallmann Guido, Keller Matthias, Gressens Pierre, Fleiss Bobbi
Biomolecular Medicine, Division of Computational and Systems Medicine, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Dev Neurosci. 2017;39(1-4):182-191. doi: 10.1159/000464131. Epub 2017 May 12.
Excitotoxicity plays a key role during insults to the developing brain such as neonatal encephalopathy, stroke, and encephalopathy of prematurity. Such insults affect many thousands of infants each year. Excitotoxicity causes frank lesions due to cell death and gliosis and disturbs normal developmental process, leading to deficits in learning, memory, and social integration that persist into adulthood. Understanding the underlying processes of the acute effects of excitotoxicity and its persistence during brain maturation provides an opportunity to identify mechanistic or diagnostic biomarkers, thus enabling and designing possible therapies. We applied mass spectrometry to provide metabolic profiles of brain tissue and plasma over time following an excitotoxic lesion (intracerebral ibotenate) to the neonatal (postnatal day 5) mouse brain. We found no differences between the plasma from the control (PBS-injected) and excitotoxic (ibotenate-injected) groups over time (on postnatal days 8, 9, 10, and 30). In the brain, we found that variations in amino acids (arginine, glutamine, phenylananine, and proline) and glycerophospholipids were sustaining acute and delayed (tertiary) responses to injury. In particular, the effect of the excitotoxic lesion on the normal profile of development was linked to alterations in a fingerprint of glycerophospolipids and amino acids. Specifically, we identified increases in the amino acids glutamine, proline, serine, threonine, tryptophan, valine, and the sphingolipid SM C26:1, and decreases in the glycerophospholipids, i.e., the arachidonic acid-containing phosphatidylcholine (PC aa) C30:2 and the PC aa C32:3. This study demonstrates that metabolic profiling is a useful approach to identify acute and tertiary effects in an excitotoxic lesion model, and generating a short list of targets with future potential in the hunt for identification, stratification, and possibly therapy.
兴奋毒性在发育中的大脑遭受损伤(如新生儿脑病、中风和早产儿脑病)时起着关键作用。此类损伤每年影响成千上万的婴儿。兴奋毒性会因细胞死亡和胶质细胞增生而导致明显病变,并扰乱正常发育过程,导致学习、记忆和社交融合方面的缺陷持续至成年期。了解兴奋毒性的急性效应及其在大脑成熟过程中的持续性的潜在机制,为识别机制性或诊断性生物标志物提供了机会,从而能够并设计出可能的治疗方法。我们应用质谱技术,在新生(出生后第5天)小鼠脑内注射兴奋毒性损伤剂(脑内注射鹅膏蕈氨酸)后,随时间推移提供脑组织和血浆的代谢谱。我们发现,随着时间推移(出生后第8、9、10和30天),对照组(注射磷酸盐缓冲盐水)和兴奋毒性组(注射鹅膏蕈氨酸)的血浆之间没有差异。在大脑中,我们发现氨基酸(精氨酸、谷氨酰胺、苯丙氨酸和脯氨酸)和甘油磷脂的变化维持了对损伤的急性和延迟(三级)反应。特别是,兴奋毒性损伤对正常发育谱的影响与甘油磷脂和氨基酸指纹图谱的改变有关。具体而言,我们发现谷氨酰胺、脯氨酸、丝氨酸、苏氨酸、色氨酸、缬氨酸等氨基酸以及鞘脂SM C26:1增加,而甘油磷脂即含花生四烯酸的磷脂酰胆碱(PC aa)C30:2和PC aa C32:3减少。这项研究表明,代谢谱分析是一种有用的方法,可用于识别兴奋毒性损伤模型中的急性和三级效应,并生成一份具有未来潜在识别、分层及可能治疗潜力的简短靶点清单。