首页> 外文期刊>Journal of neurosurgery. >Delayed reduction in hippocampal postsynaptic density protein-95 expression temporally correlates with cognitive dysfunction following controlled cortical impact in mice.
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Delayed reduction in hippocampal postsynaptic density protein-95 expression temporally correlates with cognitive dysfunction following controlled cortical impact in mice.

机译:在小鼠中受控的皮质撞击后,海马突触后密度蛋白-95表达的延迟减少暂时与认知功能障碍相关。

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OBJECT: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) induces significant neurological damage, including deficits in learning and memory, which contribute to a poor clinical prognosis. Treatment options to limit cognitive decline and promote neurological recovery are lacking, in part due to a poor understanding of the secondary or delayed processes that contribute to brain injury. In the present study, the authors characterized the temporal and spatial changes in the expression of postsynaptic density protein-95 (PSD-95), a key scaffolding protein implicated in excitatory synaptic signaling, after controlled cortical impacts in mice. Neurological injury, as assessed by the open-field activity test and the novel object recognition test, was compared with changes in PSD-95 expression. METHODS: Adult male CD-1 mice were subjected to controlled cortical impacts to simulate moderate TBI in humans. The spatial and temporal expression of PSD-95 was analyzed in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus at various time points following injury and sham operations. Neurological assessments were performed to compare changes in PSD-95 with cognitive deficits. RESULTS: A significant decrease in PSD-95 expression was observed in the ipsilateral hippocampus beginning on Day 7 postinjury. The loss of PSD-95 corresponded with a concomitant reduction in immunoreactivity for NeuN (neuronal nuclei), a neuron-specific marker. Aside from the contused cortex, a significant loss of PSD-95 immunoreactivity was not observed in the cerebral cortex. The delayed loss of hippocampal PSD-95 directly correlated with the onset of behavioral deficits, suggesting a possible causative role for PSD-95 in behavioral abnormalities following head trauma. CONCLUSIONS: A delayed loss of hippocampal synapses was observed following head trauma in mice. These data may suggest a cellular mechanism to explain the delayed learning and memory deficits in humans after TBI and provide a potential framework for further testing to implicate PSD-95 as a clinically relevant therapeutic target.
机译:目的:颅脑外伤(TBI)会引起严重的神经系统损害,包括学习和记忆障碍,从而导致临床预后不良。缺乏限制认知能力下降和促进神经系统恢复的治疗方法,部分原因是对导致脑损伤的继发性或延迟性过程了解不足。在本研究中,作者描述了在小鼠受到皮质控制后,突触后密度蛋白-95(PSD-95)的表达在时间和空间上的变化,后者是涉及兴奋性突触信号传导的关键支架蛋白。通过开放性活动测试和新型物体识别测试评估的神经损伤与PSD-95表达的变化进行了比较。方法:成年雄性CD-1小鼠受到可控的皮质撞击,以模拟人的中度TBI。在损伤和假手术后的不同时间点,分析了PSD-95在大脑皮质和海马中的时空表达。进行了神经学评估,以比较PSD-95与认知缺陷的变化。结果:受伤后第7天开始,同侧海马PSD-95表达显着下降。 PSD-95的丧失与神经元特异性标记物NeuN(神经核)的免疫反应性相应降低有关。除挫伤的皮质外,在大脑皮质中未观察到PSD-95免疫反应性的明显丧失。海马PSD-95的延迟丢失与行为缺陷的发作直接相关,提示PSD-95在颅脑外伤后行为异常中可能起因。结论:小鼠头部外伤后观察到海马突触延迟丢失。这些数据可能暗示一种细胞机制,以解释TBI后人类中延迟的学习和记忆缺陷,并为进一步测试以暗示PSD-95作为临床相关治疗靶标提供潜在的框架。

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