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2.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ; 37(10): 3278-3299, 2017 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28816095

RESUMEN

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an expanding public health epidemic with pathophysiology that is difficult to diagnose and thus treat. TBI biomarkers should assess patients across severities and reveal pathophysiology, but currently, their kinetics and specificity are unclear. No single ideal TBI biomarker exists. We identified new candidates from a TBI CSF proteome by selecting trauma-released, astrocyte-enriched proteins including aldolase C (ALDOC), its 38kD breakdown product (BDP), brain lipid binding protein (BLBP), astrocytic phosphoprotein (PEA15), glutamine synthetase (GS) and new 18-25kD-GFAP-BDPs. Their levels increased over four orders of magnitude in severe TBI CSF. First post-injury week, ALDOC levels were markedly high and stable. Short-lived BLBP and PEA15 related to injury progression. ALDOC, BLBP and PEA15 appeared hyper-acutely and were similarly robust in severe and mild TBI blood; 25kD-GFAP-BDP appeared overnight after TBI and was rarely present after mild TBI. Using a human culture trauma model, we investigated biomarker kinetics. Wounded (mechanoporated) astrocytes released ALDOC, BLBP and PEA15 acutely. Delayed cell death corresponded with GFAP release and proteolysis into small GFAP-BDPs. Associating biomarkers with cellular injury stages produced astroglial injury-defined (AID) biomarkers that facilitate TBI assessment, as neurological deficits are rooted not only in death of CNS cells, but also in their functional compromise.


Asunto(s)
Astrocitos/patología , Biomarcadores/análisis , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo/líquido cefalorraquídeo , Proteínas Reguladoras de la Apoptosis , Astrocitos/química , Conmoción Encefálica , Lesiones Traumáticas del Encéfalo/diagnóstico , Células Cultivadas , Proteína de Unión a los Ácidos Grasos 7/sangre , Fructosa-Bifosfato Aldolasa/sangre , Humanos , Péptidos y Proteínas de Señalización Intracelular/sangre , Cinética , Fosfoproteínas/sangre , Proteoma/análisis , Proteínas Supresoras de Tumor/sangre
3.
Glia ; 64(5): 668-94, 2016 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26683444

RESUMEN

Molecular markers associated with CNS injury are of diagnostic interest. Mechanical trauma generates cellular deformation associated with membrane permeability with unknown molecular consequences. We used an in vitro model of stretch-injury and proteomic analyses to determine protein changes in murine astrocytes and their surrounding fluids. Abrupt pressure-pulse stretching resulted in the rapid release of 59 astrocytic proteins with profiles reflecting cell injury and cell death, i.e., mechanoporation and cell lysis. This acute trauma-release proteome was overrepresented with metabolic proteins compared with the uninjured cellular proteome, bearing relevance for post-traumatic metabolic depression. Astrocyte-specific deletion of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3-CKO) resulted in reduced stretch-injury tolerance, elevated necrosis and increased protein release. Consistent with more lysed cells, more protein complexes, nuclear and transport proteins were released from STAT3-CKO versus nontransgenic astrocytes. STAT3-CKO astrocytes had reduced basal expression of GFAP, lactate dehydrogenase B (LDHB), aldolase C (ALDOC), and astrocytic phosphoprotein 15 (PEA15), and elevated levels of tropomyosin (TPM4) and α actinin 4 (ACTN4). Stretching caused STAT3-dependent cellular depletion of PEA15 and GFAP, and its filament disassembly in subpopulations of injured astrocytes. PEA15 and ALDOC signals were low in injured astrocytes acutely after mouse spinal cord crush injury and were robustly expressed in reactive astrocytes 1 day postinjury. In contrast, α crystallin (CRYAB) was present in acutely injured astrocytes, and absent from uninjured and reactive astrocytes, demonstrating novel marker differences among postinjury astrocytes. These findings reveal a proteomic signature of traumatically-injured astrocytes reflecting STAT3-dependent cellular survival with potential diagnostic value.


Asunto(s)
Astrocitos/metabolismo , Factor de Transcripción STAT3/metabolismo , Traumatismos de la Médula Espinal/patología , Transcriptoma/genética , Animales , Apolipoproteínas E/metabolismo , Células Cultivadas , Corteza Cerebral/citología , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Proteínas Fluorescentes Verdes/genética , Proteínas Fluorescentes Verdes/metabolismo , Espectrometría de Masas , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Noqueados , Fragmentos de Péptidos/metabolismo , Proteómica , Factor de Transcripción STAT3/genética , Transducción de Señal/efectos de los fármacos , Transducción de Señal/fisiología , Estrés Mecánico
4.
J Neurosci ; 33(31): 12870-86, 2013 Jul 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23904622

RESUMEN

Astroglial scars surround damaged tissue after trauma, stroke, infection, or autoimmune inflammation in the CNS. They are essential for wound repair, but also interfere with axonal regrowth. A better understanding of the cellular mechanisms, regulation, and functions of astroglial scar formation is fundamental to developing safe interventions for many CNS disorders. We used wild-type and transgenic mice to quantify and dissect these parameters. Adjacent to crush spinal cord injury (SCI), reactive astrocytes exhibited heterogeneous phenotypes as regards proliferation, morphology, and chemistry, which all varied with distance from lesions. Mature scar borders at 14 d after SCI consisted primarily of newly proliferated astroglia with elongated cell processes that surrounded large and small clusters of inflammatory, fibrotic, and other cells. During scar formation from 5 to 14 d after SCI, cell processes deriving from different astroglia associated into overlapping bundles that quantifiably reoriented and organized into dense mesh-like arrangements. Selective deletion of STAT3 from astroglia quantifiably disrupted the organization of elongated astroglia into scar borders, and caused a failure of astroglia to surround inflammatory cells, resulting in increased spread of these cells and neuronal loss. In cocultures, wild-type astroglia spontaneously corralled inflammatory or fibromeningeal cells into segregated clusters, whereas STAT3-deficient astroglia failed to do so. These findings demonstrate heterogeneity of reactive astroglia and show that scar borders are formed by newly proliferated, elongated astroglia, which organize via STAT3-dependent mechanisms to corral inflammatory and fibrotic cells into discrete areas separated from adjacent tissue that contains viable neurons.


Asunto(s)
Cicatriz/patología , Inflamación/patología , Neuroglía/metabolismo , Factor de Transcripción STAT3/metabolismo , Traumatismos de la Médula Espinal/patología , Animales , Bromodesoxiuridina/metabolismo , Proliferación Celular , Células Cultivadas , Cicatriz/etiología , Cicatriz/metabolismo , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Fibronectinas/metabolismo , Proteína Ácida Fibrilar de la Glía/genética , Inflamación/etiología , Antígenos Comunes de Leucocito/metabolismo , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Transgénicos , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/metabolismo , Neuroglía/patología , Factores de Transcripción SOXB1/metabolismo , Factor de Transcripción STAT3/genética , Traumatismos de la Médula Espinal/complicaciones , Timidina Quinasa/metabolismo , Factores de Tiempo
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