Retinal Neurobiology Research Group, Szentágothai Research Centre, University of Pécs, 7624 Pécs, Hungary.
Institute of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, University of Pécs, 7624 Pécs, Hungary.
Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Feb 23;24(5):4451. doi: 10.3390/ijms24054451.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is among the main causes of sudden death after head trauma. These injuries can result in severe degeneration and neuronal cell death in the CNS, including the retina, which is a crucial part of the brain responsible for perceiving and transmitting visual information. The long-term effects of mild-repetitive TBI (rmTBI) are far less studied thus far, even though damage induced by repetitive injuries occurring in the brain is more common, especially amongst athletes. rmTBI can also have a detrimental effect on the retina and the pathophysiology of these injuries is likely to differ from severe TBI (sTBI) retinal injury. Here, we show how rmTBI and sTBI can differentially affect the retina. Our results indicate an increase in the number of activated microglial cells and Caspase3-positive cells in the retina in both traumatic models, suggesting a rise in the level of inflammation and cell death after TBI. The pattern of microglial activation appears distributed and widespread but differs amongst the various retinal layers. sTBI induced microglial activation in both the superficial and deep retinal layers. In contrast to sTBI, no significant change occurred following the repetitive mild injury in the superficial layer, only the deep layer (spanning from the inner nuclear layer to the outer plexiform layer) shows microglial activation. This difference suggests that alternate response mechanisms play a role in the case of the different TBI incidents. The Caspase3 activation pattern showed a uniform increase in both the superficial and deep layers of the retina. This suggests a different action in the course of the disease in sTBI and rmTBI models and points to the need for new diagnostic procedures. Our present results suggest that the retina might serve as such a model of head injuries since the retinal tissue reacts to both forms of TBI and is the most accessible part of the human brain.
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是头部创伤后导致突然死亡的主要原因之一。这些损伤可导致中枢神经系统(CNS),包括视网膜,发生严重的退化和神经元细胞死亡。视网膜是大脑中负责感知和传递视觉信息的关键部分,轻度重复性 TBI(rmTBI)的长期影响迄今研究甚少,尽管脑内反复发生的损伤引起的损伤更为常见,尤其是在运动员中。rmTBI 也会对视网膜产生不利影响,并且这些损伤的病理生理学可能与严重 TBI(sTBI)视网膜损伤不同。在这里,我们展示了 rmTBI 和 sTBI 如何对视网膜产生不同的影响。我们的结果表明,在两种创伤模型中,视网膜中的活化小胶质细胞和 Caspase3 阳性细胞数量均增加,这表明 TBI 后炎症和细胞死亡水平升高。小胶质细胞的激活模式似乎呈分布式和广泛分布,但在各种视网膜层之间存在差异。sTBI 诱导浅层和深层视网膜中的小胶质细胞活化。与 sTBI 相反,在重复轻度损伤后,浅层没有发生明显变化,只有深层(从内核层到外丛状层)显示小胶质细胞活化。这种差异表明,在不同的 TBI 事件中,替代的反应机制发挥了作用。Caspase3 激活模式在视网膜的浅层和深层均表现出均匀增加。这表明在 sTBI 和 rmTBI 模型中,疾病过程中的作用不同,并指出需要新的诊断程序。我们目前的结果表明,视网膜可能作为头部损伤的模型,因为视网膜组织对两种形式的 TBI 均有反应,并且是大脑中最易接近的部分。