Spinal Cord Contusion Injury (spinal + cord_contusion_injury)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Chemokine expression in the white matter spinal cord precursor niche after force-defined spinal cord contusion injuries in adult rats

GLIA, Issue 8 2010
Friederike Knerlich-Lukoschus
Abstract Inflammatory cascades induced by spinal cord injuries (SCI) are localized in the white matter, a recognized neural stem- and progenitor-cell (NSPC) niche of the adult spinal cord. Chemokines, as integrators of these processes, might also be important determinants of this NSPC niche. CCL3/CCR1, CCL2/CCR2, and SDF-1,/CXCR4 were analyzed in the ventrolateral white matter after force defined thoracic SCI: Immunoreactivity (IR) density levels were measured 2 d, 7 d, 14 d, and 42 d on cervical (C 5), thoracic (T 5), and lumbar (L 5) levels. On day post operation (DPO) 42, chemokine inductions were further evaluated by real-time RT-PCR and Western blot analyses. Cellular phenotypes were confirmed by double labeling with markers for major cell types and NSPCs (nestin, Musashi-1, NG2, 3CB2, BLBP). Mitotic profiles were investigated in parallel by BrdU labeling. After lesion, chemokines were induced in the ventrolateral white matter on IR-, mRNA-, and protein-level. IR was generally more pronounced after severe lesions, with soaring increases of CCL2/CCR2 and continuous elevations of CCL3/CCR1. SDF-1, and CXCR4 IR induction was focused on thoracic levels. Chemokines/-receptors were co-expressed with astroglial, oligodendroglial markers, nestin, 3CB2 and BLBP by cells morphologically resembling radial glia on DPO 7 to DPO 42, and NG2 or Musashi-1 on DPO 2 and 7. In the white matter BrdU positive cells were significantly elevated after lesion compared with sham controls on all investigated time points peaking in the early time course on thoracic level: Here, chemokines were co-expressed by subsets of BrdU-labeled cells. These findings suggest an important role of chemokines/-receptors in the subpial white matter NSPC niche after SCI. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Macrophages and neurons are targets of retinoic acid signaling after spinal cord contusion injury

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, Issue 2 2006
Kirsten Schrage
Abstract The physiological reactions after spinal cord injury are accompanied by local synthesis of the transcriptional activator retinoic acid (RA). RA exerts its effects by binding to retinoic acid receptors (RAR) which heterodimerize with retinoid X receptors (RXR) and then act as ligand-activated transcription factors. To identify possible cellular targets of RA we investigated protein levels and cellular distribution of retinoid receptors in the rat spinal cord at 4, 7, 14 and 21 days after a contusion injury. In the nonlesioned spinal cord, immunoreactivity for RAR,, RXR,, RXR, and RXR, was localized in the cytosol of neurons, that of RXR, and RXR, in astrocytes and that of RAR,, RXR, and RXR, in some oligodendrocytes. After contusion injury RAR, and all RXRs appeared in the cell nuclei of reactive microglia and macrophages. This nuclear staining began at 4 days, was most prominent at 7 and 14 days and had decreased at 21 days after injury. A similar nuclear translocation was also observed for the RAR,, RXR, and RXR, staining in neurons situated around the border of the contusion. These observations suggest that RA participates as a signal for the physiological responses of microglia and neurons after CNS injury. [source]


Differential vulnerability of propriospinal tract neurons to spinal cord contusion injury

THE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, Issue 4 2004
Amanda C. Conta
Abstract The propriospinal system is important in mediating reflex control and in coordination during locomotion. Propriospinal neurons (PNs) present varied patterns of projections with ascending and/or descending fibers. Following spinal cord contusion injury (SCI) in the rat, certain supraspinal pathways, such as the corticospinal tract, appear to be completely abolished, whereas others, such as the rubrospinal and vestibuospinal tracts, are only partially damaged. The amount of damage to propriospinal axons following different severities of SCI is not fully known. In the present study retrograde and anterograde tracing techniques were used to assess the projection patterns of propriospinal neurons in order to determine how this system is affected following SCI. Our findings reveal that PNs have differential vulnerabilities to SCI. While short thoracic propriospinal axons are severely damaged after injury, 5,7% of long descending propriospinal tract (LDPT) projections survive following 50 and 12.5-mm weight drop contusion lesions, respectively, albeit with a reduced intensity of retrograde label. Even though the axons of short thoracic propriospinal cells are damaged, their cell bodies of origin remain intact 2 weeks after injury, indicating that they have not undergone postaxotomy retrograde cell death at this time point. Thus, short PNs may constitute a very attractive population of cells to study regenerative approaches, whereas LDPT neurons with spared axons could be targeted with therapeutic interventions, seeking to enhance recovery of function following incomplete lesions to the spinal cord. J. Comp. Neurol. 479:347,359, 2004. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]