Kalimon Olivia J, Vekaria Hemendra J, Prajapati Paresh, Short Sydney L, Hubbard W Brad, Sullivan Patrick G
Department of Neuroscience, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40508, USA.
Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, USA.
Life (Basel). 2024 Jul 30;14(8):961. doi: 10.3390/life14080961.
Current literature finds females have improved outcomes over their male counterparts after severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), while the opposite seems to be true for mild TBI. This begs the question as to what may be driving these sex differences after TBI. Estrogen is thought to be neuroprotective in certain diseases, and its actions have been shown to influence mitochondrial function. Mitochondrial impairment is a major hallmark of TBI, and interestingly, this dysfunction has been shown to be more severe in males than females after brain injury. This suggests estrogen could be playing a role in promoting "mitoprotection" following TBI. Despite the existence of estrogen receptors in mitochondria, few studies have examined the direct role of estrogen on mitochondrial function, and no studies have explored this after TBI. We hypothesized ex vivo treatment of isolated mitochondria with 17β-estradiol (E2) would improve mitochondrial function after experimental TBI in mice. Total mitochondria from the ipsilateral (injured) and contralateral (control) cortices of male and female mice were isolated 24 h post-controlled severe cortical impact (CCI) and treated with vehicle, 2 nM E2, or 20 nM E2 immediately before measuring reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, bioenergetics, electron transport chain complex (ETC) activities, and β-oxidation of palmitoyl carnitine. Protein expression of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complexes was also measured in these mitochondrial samples to determine whether this influenced functional outcomes with respect to sex or injury. While mitochondrial ROS production was affected by CCI in both sexes, there were other sex-specific patterns of mitochondrial injury 24 h following severe CCI. For instance, mitochondria from males were more susceptible to CCI-induced injury with respect to bioenergetics and ETC complex activities, whereas mitochondria from females showed only Complex II impairment and reduced β-oxidation after injury. Neither concentration of E2 influenced ETC complex activities themselves, but 20 nM E2 appeared to uncouple mitochondria isolated from the contralateral cortex in both sexes, as well as the injured ipsilateral cortex of females. These studies highlight the significance of measuring mitochondrial dysfunction in both sexes after TBI and also shed light on another potential neuroprotective mechanism in which E2 may attenuate mitochondrial dysfunction after TBI in vivo.
当前文献表明,在重度创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后,女性的预后比男性更好,而在轻度TBI中情况似乎相反。这就引出了一个问题,即TBI后是什么导致了这些性别差异。雌激素在某些疾病中被认为具有神经保护作用,其作用已被证明会影响线粒体功能。线粒体损伤是TBI的一个主要特征,有趣的是,脑损伤后这种功能障碍在男性中比女性更严重。这表明雌激素可能在TBI后促进“线粒体保护”中发挥作用。尽管线粒体中存在雌激素受体,但很少有研究探讨雌激素对线粒体功能的直接作用,且尚无研究在TBI后进行这方面的探索。我们假设用17β - 雌二醇(E2)对分离的线粒体进行体外处理会改善小鼠实验性TBI后的线粒体功能。在控制性重度皮质撞击(CCI)后24小时,从雄性和雌性小鼠的同侧(受伤)和对侧(对照)皮质中分离出总线粒体,并在测量活性氧(ROS)产生、生物能量学、电子传递链复合物(ETC)活性以及棕榈酰肉碱的β - 氧化之前,立即用载体、2 nM E2或20 nM E2进行处理。还在这些线粒体样本中测量了氧化磷酸化(OXPHOS)复合物的蛋白表达,以确定这是否会影响与性别或损伤相关的功能结果。虽然两性的线粒体ROS产生都受到CCI的影响,但在重度CCI后24小时存在其他性别特异性的线粒体损伤模式。例如,就生物能量学和ETC复合物活性而言,雄性的线粒体更容易受到CCI诱导的损伤,而雌性的线粒体在损伤后仅表现出复合物II损伤和β - 氧化减少。两种浓度的E2本身均未影响ETC复合物活性,但20 nM E2似乎使两性对侧皮质以及雌性受伤同侧皮质分离出的线粒体解偶联。这些研究突出了在TBI后测量两性线粒体功能障碍的重要性,也揭示了E2可能在体内减轻TBI后线粒体功能障碍的另一种潜在神经保护机制。