Moderate posttraumatic hypothermia decreases early calpain-mediated proteolysis and concomitant cytoskeletal compromise in traumatic axonal injury

被引:104
作者
Büki, A [1 ]
Koizumi, H
Povlishock, JT
机构
[1] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Med Coll Virginia, Dept Anat, Richmond, VA 23298 USA
[2] Univ Pecs, Sch Med, Dept Neurosurg, H-7624 Pecs, Hungary
[3] Yamaguchi Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurosurg, Ube, Yamaguchi 755, Japan
关键词
traumatic brain injury; axonal injury; hypothermia; calpain; spectrin; calcium; cytoskeleton;
D O I
10.1006/exnr.1999.7139
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) in animals and man generates widespread axonal injury characterized by focal axolemmal permeability changes, induction of calpain-mediated proteolysis, and neurofilament sidearm modification associated with neurofilament compaction (NFC) evolving to axonal disconnection. Recent observations have suggested that moderate hypothermia is neuroprotective in several models of TBI. Nevertheless, the pathway by which hypothermia prevents traumatic axonal injury (TAI) is still a matter of debate. The present study was conducted to evaluate the effects of moderate, early posttraumatic hypothermia on calpain-mediated spectrin proteolysis (CMSP), implicated in the pathogenesis of TAT. Using moderate (32 degrees C) hypothermia of 90 min duration without rewarming, the density of CMSP immunoreactive/damaged axons was quantified via LM analysis in vulnerable brain stem fiber tracts of hypothermic and normothermic rats subjected to impact acceleration TBI (90 min postinjury survival). To assess the influence of posthypothermic rewarming, a second group of animals was subjected to 90 min of hypothermia followed by 90 min of rewarming to normothermic levels when CMSP was analyzed to detect if any purported CMSP prevention persisted (180 min postinjury survival). Additionally, to determine if this protection translated into comparable cytoskeletal protection in the same foci showing decreased CMSP, antibodies targeting altered/compacted NF subunits were also employed. Moderate hypothermia applied in the acute postinjury period drastically reduced the number of damaged axons displaying CMSP at both time points and significantly reduced NFC immunoreactivity at 180 min postinjury. These results suggest that the neuroprotective effects of hypothermia in TBI are associated with the inhibition of axonal/cytoskeletal damage. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:319 / 328
页数:10
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