| Literature DB >> 27531972 |
Eun Hyuk Chang1, Istvan Adorjan2, Mayara V Mundim3, Bin Sun4, Maria L V Dizon5, Francis G Szele4.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is common in both civilian and military life, placing a large burden on survivors and society. However, with the recognition of neural stem cells in adult mammals, including humans, came the possibility to harness these cells for repair of damaged brain, whereas previously this was thought to be impossible. In this review, we focus on the rodent adult subventricular zone (SVZ), an important neurogenic niche within the mature brain in which neural stem cells continue to reside. We review how the SVZ is perturbed following various animal TBI models with regards to cell proliferation, emigration, survival, and differentiation, and we review specific molecules involved in these processes. Together, this information suggests next steps in attempting to translate knowledge from TBI animal models into human therapies for TBI.Entities:
Keywords: adult neurogenesis; proliferation; regeneration; stem cells; traumatic brain injury (TBI)
Year: 2016 PMID: 27531972 PMCID: PMC4969304 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2016.00332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Responses of the SVZ to mechanical brain injuries.
| Knife cut through cerebral cortex, corpus callosum, and striatum | Rat | Increased number of cells, mitosis ND | ND | ND | Willis et al., |
| Aspiration lesion of somatosensory cortex | Rat | Increased total number of cells, but no change in number of BrdU+ cells | No evidence of emigration to adjacent areas despite appearance of radial glia like fibers | Increased numbers of PSA-NCAM+ cells but no expression of mature markers in SVZ | Szele and Chesselet, |
| Knife cut through cerebral cortex, corpus callosum, and fimbria fornix | Rat | Number of cells ND, increased LI | ND | Newborn cells in SVZ did not express markers of neurons, or glia | Weinstein et al., |
| Weight percussion injury of cerebral cortex | Rat | ND | Emigration of nestin+/GFAP+ cells toward lesion in cortex | SVZ cells co-expressed nestin and GFAP | Holmin et al., |
| Aspiration lesion of frontal cortex and olfactory peduncle | Mouse | Increased total number of cells and size of RMS, decreased number of BrdU+ cells | Rostral migration continued; emigration into anterior olfactory nucleus, frontal cortex | Increased number of calretinin+ cells indicating increased neuronal differentiation | Jankovski et al., |
| Knife cut through RMS and cerebral cortex (separate rats) | Rat | Number of cells ND, increased number of BrdU+ cells | Rostral migration continued; emigration into cerebral cortex and striatum | PSA-NCAM+ cells in wound and striatum expressed GABA and TH | Alonso et al., |
| Olfactory bulbectomy | Mouse | Number of cells ND, but increased size of RMS, decreased LI | Rostral migration continued, no emigration noted | ND | Kirschenbaum et al., |
| Stab wound in cerebral cortex | Rat | Number of cells ND, non-significant transient increase in number of BrdU+ cells | ND | ND | Tzeng and Wu, |
| Fluid percussion injury | Rat | Number of cells ND, increased number of BrdU+ cells | ND | Newborn cells in SVZ did not express markers of neurons, or glia | Chirumamilla et al., |
| Aspiration lesion of somatosensory cortex | Mouse | Number of cells not changed, decreased number of BrdU+ cells | ND | ND | Goings et al., |
| Fluid percussion injury | Rat | Number of cells ND, increased number of Ki67+ and PCNA+ cells at long survival times | ND | Increased numbers of neurofilament+ and GFAP+ cells 1 year after injury | Chen X. H. et al., |
| Aspiration lesion of somatosensory cortex | Mouse | Number of cells ND, decreased number of retrovirally-labeled cells | Emigration into corpus callosum, and injured cortex | Differentiation into oligodendrocytes in corpus callosum, and astrocytes in lesioned cortex | Goings et al., |
| Blunt steel needle stab | Mouse | ND | ND | Differentiation of SVZ neurospheres derived from both neonate and adult TBI brains promotes more GFAP rather than neurons and oligodendrocytes | Givogri et al., |
| Aspiration lesion of somatosensory cortex | Mouse | No change in the number of BrdU+ cells in SVZ, but increased in CC | Rostral migration continued; emigration of newborn Dcx+ cells into corpus callosum and injured cortex | ND | Sundholm-Peters et al., |
| Controlled cortical impact of cerebral cortex | Mouse | Number of cells ND, increased number of Ki67+ and BrdU+ cells on 1, 3, 7 DPI | ND | ND | Theus et al., |
| Controlled cortical impact of cerebral cortex | Rat | Number of cells ND, increased number of Ki67+ cells | ND | Only trends of reduction for DCX+ cells in SVZ and SGZ | Acosta et al., |
| Cortical contusion injury of cerebral cortex | Mouse | Number of cells ND, increased number of BrdU+ cells | Decreased number of BrdU+/NeuN+ cells in olfactory bulb; increased number of emigrating BrdU+ cells toward lesion in cortex but not NeuN positive | Newborn cells in SVZ did not express markers of neurons but glia (GFAP and IBA-1) | Radomski et al., |
| Aspiration lesion of the motor cortex | Mouse | Increase in BrdU+ cells after 7 days, and decrease after 30 days | Emigration of Dcx+ cells into the injured cortex | SVZ derived cells differentiated in GFAP+, NeuN+ and Olig2+ cells in injured cortex | Saha et al., |
| Traumatic axonal injury in corpus collosum | Mouse | Decreased total number of Gli1 positive cells in SVZ | ND | Number of NG2 progenitors increased in the cortex and corpus callosum; rarely colabeled with NG2 progenitors | Mierzwa et al., |
| Cortical impact of cerebral cortex | Piglet | Number of cells ND, LI ND | Increased number of neuroblasts in the white matter of the hemisphere ipsilateral to the injury | No increase of total number of neuroblasts in the white matter | Costine et al., |
Search key words: “SVZ” “Brain” “injury”—among 308 articles, the relevant studies are listed, ND, not determined.
Figure 1Altered SVZ proliferation is variable across species and experiments. (A) Increased SVZ proliferation and/or neurogenesis in rat after mechanical injury to brain. Data from multiple studies. 1 - (Tzeng and Wu, 1999), 2 - (Goodus et al., 2015), 3 - (Gotts and Chesselet, 2005), 4 - (Szele and Chesselet, 1996; Sun et al., 2009, 2010; Bye et al., 2011), 5 - (Weinstein et al., 1996) 6, 7 - (Bye et al., 2011; Grande et al., 2013), 8 - (Acosta et al., 2013, 2014). For both (A,B), baseline was set at a value of 10 and percent changes from this are shown. (B) SVZ proliferation or neurogenesis in mouse after mechanical injury across multiple studies. Individual studies shown with colored lines (Jankovski et al., 1998; Goings et al., 2002; Ramaswamy et al., 2005; Theus et al., 2010; Radomski et al., 2013; Saha et al., 2013; Sullivan et al., 2013; Mierzwa et al., 2014; Thomsen et al., 2014). The Saha et al., study was the most complete including time points at 3 days, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 weeks post-lesion. (C). Cortical injury via aspiration. The injury excludes the corpus callosum (arrowhead) but is close to the subventricular zone (arrow). Aspiration lesions of the cerebral cortex were made in the same location both in mouse and rat (Szele and Chesselet, 1996; Goings et al., 2002, 2004).
Figure 2SVZ neural stem cells differentiate into neuroblasts, that migrate tangentially through the rostral migratory stream to the olfactory bulb, where they migrate radially and differentiate into interneurons. In response to injury, these cells migrate from the SVZ/RMS to the injury site in an attempt to regenerate the damaged tissue (Saha et al., 2012).
Figure 3Changes in cortical microenvironment assist progenitor migration after lesion. CD31 immunostaining of control intact cortex (A) and lesioned cortex at different times after injury (B–D). Double immunofluorescence confocal micrograph of Dcx (green) and CD31 (red) at day 7 (E–G) and day 15 (H). Similarly, double-immunostaining of astrocytes (blue) and neural progenitors (green) after 7 days of lesion (I,J). (K,L asterisk) Migration of progenitors (green) without any association. GFP immunostaining of brain sections 8 days after lentivirus injection (dpi) into the SVZ/RMS (M). In the cortex, GFP+ cells (green) co-express Dcx (red) (boxed in N). GFP+ cells remain within the RMS in control brains (O). GFP+ progenitors also showed association with either blood vessels (P–R) or astrocytes (S–U). Scale bars: (A–D) 250 μm, (E,H) 50 μm, (F,G) 16 μm, (I,J,P–U) 20 μm, (K,L) 30 μm, (N) 80 μm, (N inset) 40 μm, (M,O) 100 μm, (M inset) 50 μm (Saha et al., 2013).