Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6018364 | Experimental Neurology | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Ethidium bromide (EB) has been extensively used in the rat as a model of spinal cord demyelination. However, this lesion has not been addressed in the adult mouse, a model with unlimited genetic potential. Here we characterize behavioral function, inflammation, myelin status and axonal viability following bilateral injection of 0.20Â mg/mL ethidium bromide or saline into the ventral white matter (VWM) of female C57Bl/6 mice. EB-induced VWM demyelination significantly reduced spared VWM and Basso Mouse Scale (BMS) scores persisting out to 2Â months. Chronic hindlimb dysfunction was accompanied by a persistent inflammatory response (demonstrated by CD45+ immunofluorescence) and axonal loss (demonstrated by NF-M immunofluorescence and electron microscopy; EM). These cellular responses differ from the rat where inflammation resolves by 3-4Â weeks and axon loss is minimal following EB demyelination. As these data suggest that EB-injection in the mouse spinal cord is a non-remyelinating lesion, we sought to ask whether wheel running could promote recovery by enhancing plasticity of local lumbar circuitry independent of remyelination. This did not occur as BMS and Treadscan® assessment revealed no significant effect of wheel running on recovery. However, this study defines the importance of descending ventral motor pathways to locomotor function in the mouse as VWM loss results in a chronic hindlimb deficit.
Keywords
glial fibrilary acidic proteinneurofilament Mventral white matterAnterior cord syndromedemyelinationMitochondrial DNASpinal cord injurybovine serum albuminethidium bromideinflammationImmunohistochemistryBasso, Beattie, and BresnahanTris buffered salineLocomotionnormal donkey serumpontomedullary reticular formationVentrolateral funiculusdorsolateral funiculusPhosphate buffered salinefibronectin 1Basso Mouse ScaleRegions Of InterestElectron microscopymesencephalic locomotor regionquantitative real-time polymerase chain reactionparaformaldehydeMyelin basic proteinRunning wheelglyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Neuroscience
Neurology
Authors
Nicholas J. Kuypers, Kurtis T. James, Gaby U. Enzmann, David S.K. Magnuson, Scott R. Whittemore,