Role of MHC-I Expression on Spinal Motoneuron Survival and Glial Reactions Following Ventral Root Crush in Mice

Lesions to the CNS/PNS interface are especially severe, leading to elevated neuronal degeneration. In the present work, we establish the ventral root crush model for mice, and demonstrate the potential of such an approach, by analyzing injury evoked motoneuron loss, changes of synaptic coverage and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luciana Politti Cartarozzi, Matheus Perez, Frank Kirchhoff, Alexandre Leite Rodrigues de Oliveira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-05-01
Series:Cells
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/8/5/483
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Summary:Lesions to the CNS/PNS interface are especially severe, leading to elevated neuronal degeneration. In the present work, we establish the ventral root crush model for mice, and demonstrate the potential of such an approach, by analyzing injury evoked motoneuron loss, changes of synaptic coverage and concomitant glial responses in &#946;2-microglobulin knockout mice (&#946;2m KO). Young adult (8&#8722;12 weeks old) C57BL/6J (WT) and &#946;2m KO mice were submitted to a L4&#8722;L6 ventral roots crush. Neuronal survival revealed a time-dependent motoneuron-like cell loss, both in WT and &#946;2m KO mice. Along with neuronal loss, astrogliosis increased in WT mice, which was not observed in &#946;2m KO mice. Microglial responses were more pronounced during the acute phase after lesion and decreased over time, in WT and KO mice. At 7 days after lesion &#946;2m KO mice showed stronger Iba-1<sup>+</sup> cell reaction. The synaptic inputs were reduced over time, but in &#946;2m KO, the synaptic loss was more prominent between 7 and 28 days after lesion. Taken together, the results herein demonstrate that ventral root crushing in mice provides robust data regarding neuronal loss and glial reaction. The retrograde reactions after injury were altered in the absence of functional MHC-I surface expression.
ISSN:2073-4409