Robertson R Meldrum, Wang Yuyang
Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2025 Jan 1;133(1):245-256. doi: 10.1152/jn.00487.2024. Epub 2024 Dec 12.
Spreading depolarization (SD) temporarily shuts down neural processing in mammals and insects. Age is a critical factor for predicting the consequences of SD in humans. We investigated the effect of aging in an insect model of SD and explored the contribution of oxidative stress. Aging slowed the recovery of intact locusts from asphyxia. We monitored SD by recording the DC potential across the blood-brain barrier in response to bath application of the Na/K-ATPase inhibitor, ouabain. Ouabain induced changes to the DC potential that could be separated into two distinct components: a slow, permanent negative shift, like the negative ultraslow potential recorded in mammals and human patients, and rapid, reversible negative DC shifts (SD events). Aging had no effect on the slow shift but increased the duration of SD events. This was accompanied by a decrease in the rate of recovery of DC potential at the end of the SD event. An attempt to generate oxidative stress using rotenone was unsuccessful, but pretreatment with the antioxidant, -acetylcysteine amide, had opposite effects to those of aging, reducing duration, and increasing rate of recovery, suggesting that it prevented oxidative damage occurring during the ouabain treatment. The antioxidant also reduced the rate of the slow negative shift. We propose that the aging locust nervous system is more vulnerable to stress due to a prior accumulation of oxidative damage. Our findings strengthen the notion that insects provide useful models for the investigation of cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying SD in mammals. Anoxia and similar energetic crises trigger a shutdown of central neural processing in a process of spreading depolarization (SD) that is generally pathological in mammals and protective in insects. We show that older animals are slower to recover from SD in an insect model. Moreover, preventing oxidative stress with an antioxidant speeds recovery. These findings demonstrate the role of oxidative stress in contributing to the vulnerability of the aging insect central nervous system (CNS) in energetic emergencies.
扩散性去极化(SD)会暂时中断哺乳动物和昆虫的神经活动。年龄是预测人类SD后果的关键因素。我们在昆虫SD模型中研究了衰老的影响,并探讨了氧化应激的作用。衰老减缓了完整蝗虫从窒息状态中的恢复速度。我们通过记录血脑屏障上的直流电位来监测SD,该电位是在浴用钠钾ATP酶抑制剂哇巴因后产生的。哇巴因引起的直流电位变化可分为两个不同的成分:一个缓慢的、永久性的负向偏移,类似于在哺乳动物和人类患者中记录到的负向超慢电位,以及快速的、可逆的负向直流偏移(SD事件)。衰老对缓慢偏移没有影响,但增加了SD事件的持续时间。这伴随着SD事件结束时直流电位恢复速率的降低。使用鱼藤酮产生氧化应激的尝试未成功,但用抗氧化剂N - 乙酰半胱氨酸酰胺预处理产生的效果与衰老相反,减少了持续时间并提高了恢复速率,这表明它预防了哇巴因处理过程中发生的氧化损伤。抗氧化剂还降低了缓慢负向偏移的速率。我们认为,由于先前积累的氧化损伤,衰老的蝗虫神经系统对压力更敏感。我们的研究结果强化了这样一种观念,即昆虫为研究哺乳动物SD背后的细胞和分子机制提供了有用的模型。缺氧和类似的能量危机在扩散性去极化(SD)过程中引发中枢神经活动的中断,这一过程在哺乳动物中通常是病理性的,而在昆虫中具有保护作用。我们表明,在昆虫模型中,老年动物从SD中恢复的速度较慢。此外,用抗氧化剂预防氧化应激可加速恢复。这些发现证明了氧化应激在导致衰老昆虫中枢神经系统(CNS)在能量紧急情况下易损性方面的作用。