18 research outputs found

    Metallothionein-IIA promotes initial neurite elongation and postinjury reactive neurite growth and facilitates healing after focal cortical brain injury

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    Metallothioneins (MTs) are small, cysteine-rich, metal binding proteins. Their function has often been considered as stress-related proteins capable of protecting cells from heavy metal toxicity and oxidative free radicals. However, recent interest has focused on the brain-specific MT-III isoform, which has neurite-inhibitory properties. To investigate the effect of another MT isoform, human MT-IIA, on neurite growth, we used rat cortical neuron cultures. MT-IIA promoted a significant increase in the rate of initial neurite elongation of individually plated neurons. We also investigated the effect of MT-IIA on the neuronal response to axonal transection in vitro. MT-IIA promoted reactive axonal growth after injury, and, by 18 hr after transection, MT-IIA had promoted axonal growth across the injury tract. Exogenous application of MT-IIA after cortical brain injury promoted wound healing, as observed by a significant decrease in cellular degradation at 4 d after injury. Furthermore, MT-IIA-treated rats exhibited numerous SMI-312-immunoreactive axonal processes within the injury tract. This was in contrast to vehicle-treated animals, in which few axonal sprouts were observed. By 7 d after injury, MT-IIA treatment resulted in a total closing over of the injury tract by microglia, astrocytes, and reactive axonal processes. However, although some reactive axonal processes were observed within the injury tract of vehicle-treated rats, the tract itself was almost never entirely enclosed. These results are discussed in relation to a possible physiological role of metallothioneins in the brain, as well as in a therapeutic context.7 page(s

    Protective role of metallothioneins in the injured mammalian brain

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    Metallothioneins (MTs) are small cysteine-rich proteins which are found widely throughout the mammalian body, including the CNS. There are extensive data on the structure and expression of MTs, and many basic properties pertinent to MT biology in the CNS appear to be well established. As discussed in this review, one isoform class (MT-I/II) is rapidly induced following many types of CNS insult, and is strongly neuroprotective, whilst another isoform class (MT-III) shows major differences in its expression profile and physiological properties. As in other tissues, there is no clear consensus on the mechanism of MT action in the CNS and how it exerts its protective role, despite a number of excellent animal and cell culture models of MT expression in the brain, and a large literature on the physico-chemical properties of MTs extending over several decades. This review is therefore an attempt to summarise the recent literature on the expression of MTs in the adult mammalian brain and how MTs possibly act to protect the brain following physical or chemical insult. One exciting finding from recent work is that perturbing the levels of MT in the brain has an effect that extends beyond cells which normally express MT to other cell types including neurons, microglia and cells of the immune system. These observations were made mainly using animal models in which MT action can be observed in its normal cellular context, and this review focuses particularly on work conducted in animal models of physical and chemical injury in the brain.10 page(s

    Diffuse axonal injury in brain trauma: insights from alterations in neurofilaments

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    Traumatic brain injury from penetrating or closed forces to the cranium can result in a range of forms of neural damage, which culminate in mortality or impart mild to significant neurological disability. In this regard, diffuse axonal injury is a major neuronal pathophenotype of traumatic brain injury and is associated with a complex set of cytoskeletal changes. The neurofilament triplet proteins are key structural cytoskeletal elements, which may also be important contributors to the tensile strength of axons. This has significant implications with respect to how axons may respond to traumatic brain injury. It is not known, however, whether neurofilament compaction and the cytoskeletal changes that evolve following axonal injury represent a component of a protective mechanism following damage, or whether they serve to augment degeneration and progression to secondary axotomy. Here we review the structure and role of neurofilament proteins in normal neuronal function. We also discuss the processes that characterize diffuse axonal injury and the resultant alterations in neurofilaments, highlighting potential clues to a possible protective or degenerative influence of specific neurofilament alterations within injured neurons. The potential utility of neurofilament assays as biomarkers for axonal injury is also discussed. Insights into the complex alterations in neurofilaments will contribute to future efforts in developing therapeutic strategies to prevent, ameliorate or reverse neuronal degeneration in the CNS following traumatic injury

    Distribution of exogenous metallothionein following intraperitoneal and intramuscular injection of metallothionein-deficient mice

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    Metallothionein-I/II (MT-I/II) is a small metal-binding protein with antioxidant and neuroprotective properties, which has been used experimentally as a neurotherapeutic agent in multiple conditions. Therefore it is important to determine whether exogenous MT-I/II is retained in specific organs or expelled from the body following intramuscular and intraperitoneal injection. The distribution of exogenous MT-IIA (the major human MT-I/II isoform) was examined in MT-I/II-deficient mice, by immunohistochemistry of tissue samples and western blotting of urine samples. MT-IIA was detected within epithelial cells of the kidney cortical and medullary tubules within 1 hour of either intramuscular or intraperitoneal injection. Additionally, MT-IIA was detected within the urine at 1 hour after injection, indicating rapid absorbance into the circulation and filtration through the kidney glomerulus. A portion of the intramuscularly-injected MT-IIA remained within the muscle for at least 24 hours after injection. No MT-IIA was observed within the liver or the brain after either a single injection or a series of MT-IIA injections. These results are consistent with earlier reports that exogenously administered MT-IIA does not cross the intact blood-brain barrier, although a receptor for MT-I/II (megalin) is present in the choroid plexus. We postulate that due to losses through the urine, circulating MT-IIA levels drop rapidly after injection and do not permit transport across the choroid plexus. Peptide analogues of MT-I/II with similar neuroactive properties (emtins) may be more suited for CNS delivery

    Neuron-glia communication : metallothionein expression is specifically up-regulated by astrocytes in response to neuronal injury

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    Recent data suggests that metallothioneins (MTs) are major neuroprotective proteins within the CNS. In this regard, we have recently demonstrated that MT-IIA (the major human MT-I/-II isoform) promotes neural recovery following focal cortical brain injury. To further investigate the role of MTs in cortical brain injury, MT-I/-II expression was examined in several different experimental models of cortical neuron injury. While MT-I/-II immunoreactivity was not detectable in the uninjured rat neocortex, by 4 days, following a focal cortical brain injury, MT-I/-II was found in astrocytes aligned along the injury site. At latter time points, astrocytes, at a distance up to several hundred microns from the original injury tract, were MT-I/-II immunoreactive. Induced MT-I/-II was found both within the cell body and processes. Using a cortical neuron/astrocyte co-culture model, we observed a similar MT-I/-II response following in vitro injury. Intriguingly, scratch wound injury in pure astrocyte cultures resulted in no change in MT-I/-II expression. This suggests that MT induction was specifically elicited by neuronal injury. Based upon recent reports indicating that MT-I/-II are major neuroprotective proteins within the brain, our results provide further evidence that MT-I/-II plays an important role in the cellular response to neuronal injury.8 page(s

    Microglia and motor neurons during disease progression in the SOD1G93A mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis : changes in arginase1 and inducible nitric oxide synthase

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    Background: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease affecting the motor system. Although the etiology of the disease is not fully understood, microglial activation and neuroinflammation are thought to play a role in disease progression.Methods: We examined the immunohistochemical expression of two markers of microglial phenotype, the arginine-metabolizing enzymes inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and arginase1 (Arg1), in the spinal cord of a mouse model carrying an ALS-linked mutant human superoxide dismutase transgene (SOD1G93A) and in non-transgenic wild-type (WT) mice. Immunolabeling for iNOS and Arg1 was evaluated throughout disease progression (6 to 25 weeks), and correlated with body weight, stride pattern, wire hang duration and ubiquitin pathology. For microglia and motor neuron counts at each time point, SOD1G93A and WT animals were compared using an independent samples t-test. A Welch t-test correction was applied if Levene's test showed that the variance in WT and SOD1G93A measurements was substantially different.Results: Disease onset, measured as the earliest change in functional parameters compared to non-transgenic WT mice, occurred at 14 weeks of age in SOD1G93A mice. The ventral horn of the SOD1G93A spinal cord contained more microglia than WT from 14 weeks onwards. In SOD1G93A mice, Arg1-positive and iNOS-positive microglia increased 18-fold and 7-fold, respectively, between 10 and 25 weeks of age (endpoint) in the lumbar spinal cord, while no increase was observed in WT mice. An increasing trend of Arg1- and iNOS-expressing microglia was observed in the cervical spinal cords of SOD1G93A mice. Additionally, Arg1-negative motor neurons appeared to selectively decline in the spinal cord of SOD1G93A mice, suggesting that Arg1 may have a neuroprotective function.Conclusions: This study suggests that the increase in spinal cord microglia occurs around and after disease onset and is preceded by cellular pathology. The results show that Arg1 and iNOS, thought to have opposing inflammatory properties, are upregulated in microglia during disease progression and that Arg1 in motor neurons may confer protection from disease processes. Further understanding of the neuroinflammatory response, and the Arg1/iNOS balance in motor neurons, may provide suitable therapeutic targets for ALS.18 page(s

    Olfactory ensheathing cells moderate nuclear factor kappaB translocation in astrocytes

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    Nuclear factor kappaB (NFκB) is a key transcriptional regulator of inflammatory genes. We investigated the modulatory effects of olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs), microglia and meningeal fibroblasts on translocation of NFκB to astrocyte nuclei. The percentage of activated astrocytes in co-cultures with OECs was significantly less than for co-cultures with microglia (p<0.001) and fibroblasts (p<0.05). Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and calcium ionophore stimulation of p65 NFκB translocation to nuclei provided an in vitro model of astrocyte inflammatory activation. Soluble factors released by OECs significantly moderated the astrocytic NFκB translocation induced by either PMA/calcium ionophore or microglia-derived factors (p<0.001). Insulin-like growth factor-1 may contribute to these effects, since it is expressed by OECs and also significantly moderated the astrocytic NFκB translocation (p<0.05), albeit insufficiently to fully account for the OEC-induced moderation (p<0.01). Olfactory ensheathing cells significantly moderated the increased transcription of the pro-inflammatory cytokine, granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor in the activated astrocytes (p<0.01). These results suggest that transplanted OECs could improve neural repair after CNS injury by moderating astrocyte activation.9 page(s

    Sheep have an unusual variant of the brain-specific metallothionein, metallothionein-III.

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    Sheep metallothionein-III (MT-III) cDNA was isolated from a brain cDNA library and characterized. In contrast with MT-III from other species, sheep MT-III cDNA is predicted to encode a protein with significantly different metal-binding properties, owing to the loss of three of its cysteine residues. RT-PCR from other sheep confirmed that this aberrant structure is ubiquitous in this species. MT-III was successfully isolated from sheep brain, demonstrating that the cDNA does give rise to a protein product of the predicted structure. Sheep MT-III is similar to other mammalian MT-IIIs in that it retains the Cys-Pro-Cys-Pro motif which is thought to encode growth-inhibitory activity, and we show that it is likewise able to inhibit neuron survival in vitro. This is the first naturally occurring variant of MT-III (or any other major mammalian MT gene) which gives rise to a protein product. These findings are discussed in light of proposed roles of MT in the mammalian brain
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