| Literature DB >> 30005693 |
Joan Y W Liu1,2,3, Mar Matarin1, Cheryl Reeves1,2, Andrew W McEvoy1,4, Anna Miserocchi4, Pamela Thompson1,5,6, Sanjay M Sisodiya1,7,6, Maria Thom8,9.
Abstract
Doublecortin (DCX) is widely regarded as a marker of immature and migrating neurons during development. While DCX expression persists in adults, particularly in the temporal lobe and neurogenic regions, it is unknown how seizures influence its expression. The aim of the present study was to explore the distribution and characteristics of DCX-expressing cells in surgical and postmortem samples from 40 adult and paediatric patients, with epilepsy and with or without hippocampal sclerosis (HS), compared to post mortem controls. The hippocampus (pes and body), parahippocampal gyrus, amygdala, temporal pole and temporal cortex were examined with DCX immunohistochemistry using four commercially-available DCX antibodies, labelled cells were quantified in different regions of interest as well as their co-expression with cell type specific markers (CD68, Iba1, GFAP, GFAP∂, nestin, SOX2, CD34, OLIG2, PDGFRβ, NeuN) and cell cycle marker (MCM2). Histological findings were compared with clinical data, as well as gene expression data obtained from the temporal cortex of 83 temporal lobe epilepsy cases with HS. DCX immunohistochemistry identified immature (Nestin-/NeuN-) neurons in layer II of the temporal neocortex in patients with and without epilepsy. Their number declined significantly with age but was not associated with the presence of hippocampal sclerosis, seizure semiology or memory dysfunction. DCX+ cells were prominent in the paralaminar nuclei and periamygdalar cortex and these declined with age but were not significantly associated with epilepsy history. DCX expressing cells with ramified processes were prominent in all regions, particularly in the hippocampal subgranular zone, where significantly increased numbers were observed in epilepsy samples compared to controls. DCX ramified cells co-expressed Iba1, CD68 and PDGFRβ, and less frequently MCM2, OLIG2 and SOX2, but no co-localization was observed with CD34, nestin or GFAP/GFAP ∂. Gene expression data from neocortical samples in patients with TLE and HS supported ongoing DCX expression in adults. We conclude that DCX identifies a range of morphological cell types in temporal lobe epilepsy, including immature populations, glial and microglial cell types. Their clinical relevance and biological function requires further study but we show some evidence for alteration with age and in epilepsy.Entities:
Keywords: Doublecortin; Hippocampus; Memory; Microglia; Temporal lobe epilepsy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30005693 PMCID: PMC6045867 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-018-0566-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Clinical and pathology details of cases and control groups (Further detail of each case is available in Additional file 1: Table S1)
| Group | Tissue type | NUMBER | Predominant pattern of HS in body | Age (at surgery or death); mean (range, years) | Gender | Regions examined/study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult epilepsy TLE/HS (S1–13) | Surgical Fixed | 13 | ILAE Type 1 HS | 41.3 (22–54) | 7F: 6 M | HB,PES,PHG,TPole, TLobe, Amyg / qIHC |
| Paediatric epilepsy TLE/HS (S1–5) | Surgical Fixed | 5 | ILAE type 1 HS only | 12.2 (8–15) | 2F: 3 M | HB, TLobe / q IHC |
| Adult epilepsy TLE/NO HS (S19–24) | Surgical Fixed | 6 | NO HS | 28.6 (24–35) | 2F: 4 M | HB,PES,PHG,TPole, TLobe, Amyg / q IHC |
| Adult epilepsy (EPM1–16) | Post Mortem | 16 | ILAE type 1 HS in 8 CASES | 48.7 (18–75) | 8F: 8 M | HB, PHG, Amyg, Temporal Cortex (Both hemispheres included in 4 cases) / q IHC |
| Adult non-epilepsy controls (C1–12) | Post mortem | 12 | No HS | 56.4 (28–85) | 5F: 7 M | HB, PHG, Amyg, Temporal Cortex / q IHC |
| Adult epilepsy TLE/HS | Fresh | 83 | All HS (16 with TLS) | 36.3 (16–63) | 45F-38M | Middle temporal gyrus (cortex) / RNA |
| Adult non-epilepsy controls | Fresh | 73b | No HS | 50.8 (20–79) | 14F–53F | Middle temporal gyrus (cortex)/ RNA |
S surgical epilepsy case, EPM adult epilepsy post-mortem, C Post-mortem control, HB Hippocampal body, PES pes hippocampus, PHG parahippocampal gyrus, TPole temporal pole, TLobe temporal lobe, TLS temporal lobe sclerosis, Amyg amygdala, HS hippocampal sclerosis, qIHC qualitative and quantitative immunohistochemistry, RNAseq RNA sequencing and expression analysis, ILAE International League against epilepsy, TLE temporal lobe epilepsy.
aOnly samples from adolescence and young and middle adulthood period. Controls from Kang et al.
bSamples obtained from the MRC brain bank, Edinburgh. A1C = Primary auditory cortex
Fig. 1Doublecortin (DCX) in the cortex and hippocampus. a Section though a temporal lobe indicating the regions studies (MTG = middle temporal gyrus, ITG, inferior temporal gyrus, FG = fusiform gyrus) b Layer II DCX positive cells (DCX+) using DCX Ab 4 (see Table 2). Cells of different size, including some with more neuronal features and radial perpendicular processes (arrowhead) as well as dense nuclear labelling of small cells without processes (arrow) were observed. C. A bipolar cell in cortical layer II with DCX labelling with long beaded processes extending perpendicularly into layer I. d Clusters of small, intensely labelled DCX+ cells at interface of layer II and I labelled using DCX Ab1 (see Table 2). Top insert shows clusters of DCX+ cells; the bottom insert shows prominent nucleoli and neuronal appearance of DCX+ cells. e In the hippocampus granule cell layer (GCL) small DCX+ cells with ramified, multiple processes were observed; f In another case, the delicate branching processes of the ramified cells are shown. g A column of DCX+ cells extending though the GCL was observed in another case. h Granule cell neurons showed occasional DCX expression. i Small round DCX+ oligo-like cells were noted in the hippocampus in satellite location to neurons. j.DCX expression, in the periventricular germinal matrix of the lateral ventricle, in a developmental human control of 13 weeks, showing small cells with extended processes. k Bar chart showing greater linear densities for all morphological DCX+ cell types in surgical epilepsy cases compared to post mortem (PM) epilepsy controls and controls with statistically significant differences noted for ramified cell types only (p < 0.0001). l The linear density of layer II tufted DCX+ cell types showed an inverse correlation with age for all cases (surgical and PM) (p = 0.001) as well as for surgical cases alone (p = 0.016; not shown on graph). m Although greater DCX+ linear densities of tufted cells were present in patients with sensory aura of abnormal taste and smell compared to other aura types or no auras but these differences were not significant. Bar = 1 cm in A; B, D, F, G-J = 20 μm approx. (original magnification × 400) and C and E = 50 μm approx
Fig. 2Amygdala and DCX expression. a Coronal level though caudal amygdala in a post mortem case indicating the location of the paralaminar nucleus with red arrows. PAC = peri-amygdala cortex, AB = accessory basal, B = basal and L = lateral nuclei. b DCX positive cells clusters and beaded fibres in the PAC of a surgical patient with TLE/HS; c In a further case, columns of DCX+ cells were seen in the PAC as well as horizontal processes. d Further surgical TLE/HS case with DCX Ab1 (see Table 2) with clusters of small immature cells with beaded processes and some with nuclear labelling (inset: shows coarser DCX+ bundles traversing the amygdala in a surgical case). e Clusters of small densely labelled immature DCX+ cells and processes in the amygdala in post mortem samples of paralaminar nucleus. f Post mortem caudal amygdala indicating the location of the paralaminar nucleus above the ventricle. g The paralaminar nucleus shown at low magnification in DCX labelled section, with nests of positive cells and clusters of processes indicated (arrows) running along the border. h At higher magnification these clusters correspond to small DCX+ cells intermingled with DCX immunonegative-negative mature neurons. Bar in A, F = 800 μm approx.; G = 100 μm approx.; in B, C, E, H = 50 μm approx.; in D = 20 μm approx
Immunohistochemistry panel
| Antibody | Product code, Supplier | Dilution (method) | Target Epitope |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 4606, Cell Signaling Tech. Boston, US. * | 1:250 (IHC, IF) | Amino acid sequence 40–70 and 350–410 of human DCX |
| DCX | AB18723, Abcam, Cambridge, UK. | 1:4000 (IF) | AA 300 to the C-terminus of synthetic human DCX |
| DCX | SC-8066, Santa Cruz Biotech. Heidelberg, Germany. | 1:400 (IF) | C-terminus 365–402 of human DCX |
| DCX | AB2253, EMD Millipore, Watford UK. | 1:1000 (IHC, IF) | C-terminus 350–365 |
| Nestin | AB22035, Abcam, Cambridge, UK. | 1:1000 (IHC, IF) | 150 aa recombinant fragment from human nestin conjugated to GST |
| Nestin | AB105389, Abcam, Cambridge, UK. | 1:100 (IF) | Synthetic peptide corresponding to the C terminus of Human Nestin. |
| Sox 2 | AB5603, EMD Millipore, Hertfordshire, UK. | 1:400 (IF) | KLH-conjugated linear peptide corresponding to a C-terminal region sequence of human Sox2 |
| GFAP-∂ | AB93251, Abcam, Cambridge, UK, | 1:4000 (IF) | Synthetic peptide conjugated to KLH derived from within residues 350 to the C-terminus of Mouse GFAP ∂ |
| GFAP | Z0334, DAKO, Cambridgeshire, UK. | 1:1500 (IF) | GFAP |
| NeuN | MAB377, EMD Millipore, Hertfordshire, UK. | 1:100 (IF) | Purified neuronal nuclei |
| Iba1 | 019–19,741, WAKO, Osaka, Japan. | 1:6000 (IF) | Synthetic peptide corresponding to C-terminus of Iba1 |
| CD68 | AB783, Abcam, Cambridge, UK. | 1:50 (IF) | Macrophages, microglia |
| CD34 | IR632, DAKO, Cambridgeshire, UK. | 1:25 (IF) | Endothelial cells |
| Olig 2 | AB9610, EMD Millipore Hertfordshire, UK | 1:200 (IF) | Recombinant mouse Olig-2 |
| PDGFR-beta | AB32570, Abcam, Cambridge, UK. | 1:1000 (IF) | Synthetic peptide within Human PDGF Receptor beta aa 1050 to the C-terminus |
| MCM2 | 610,700, BD biosciences, Oxford, UK. | 1:900 (IF) | Human BM28 aa. 725–888 |
For all antibodies, sections were pre-treated in sodium citrate solution (pH 6.0) microwaved at 800 W for twelve minutes. All primary antibodies were incubated overnight at 4 °C, except for anti-Iba1, CD68 and GFAP which were incubated for an hour at room temperature, and anti-GFAP ∂ which was incubated for 48 h at 4 °C. *Previous studies using DCX in human tissue studies.
Abbreviations: IHC immunohistochemistry, IF immunofluorescence
Fig. 3Characterizing DCX positive cells in the temporal cortex, hippocampus and amygdala of surgical patients with epilepsy, and comparison of commercial antibodies. In all panels, the arrowheads indicate single labelled cells, while arrows point to double labelled cells. Confocal images are merged projections of 5 to 7 images acquired in a z-stack. a. The immunoreactivity of two different commercially-available anti-Dcx antibodies. Both DCX Ab2 AB18723 (Abcam, Cambridgeshire, UK) and DCX Ab 1 #4606 (Cell Signaling Technology, Inc. MA, USA) labelled small cells in the hippocampal granule cell layer (GCL) of a patient with epilepsy and HS Type 1 (arrow) (Table 2). DCX Ab1 labelled more cells overall than DCX Ab2. Temporal Cortex Layer I/II: b. NeuN expression was not frequently observed in small DCX+ cells located in layer II of the temporal lobe cortex (arrowhead). c. In another case, DCX/NeuN positive cells were more frequently observed in the superficial temporal cortex than in the temporal pole (arrows). d. DCX positive cells expressing Olig2 in the nucleus (arrow) were noted in layer 1 of an epilepsy case (arrow), but MCM2/DCX+ cells were not observed (inset). e. Nestin+ glial fibres were observed in the subpial layer and layer I and II, but did not co-localise with DCX expression. Hippocampus: f. In general there were rare DCX/NeuN colocalised cells in the dentate gyrus; in this image there is a rare co-localised cell (arrow). g. GFAP showed dense labelling of astroglial process in hippocampal regions but no co-localisation with DCX was noted. h. Labelling with Iba1 highlighted mature microglial cell types, with ramified processes, particularly in the subgranular zone as shown, and many co-expressed DCX (arrow); i Co-labelled CD68/DCX+ cells were also observed (arrow). j. PDGFRβ was expressed in multipolar cells in the hippocampus and temporal lobe in addition to pericytes; focal co-labelling with DCX was noted in some cells (arrow); Inset show a DCX+ ramified cell expressing MCM2 in the nucleus. Amygdala. k. Distinct populations or clusters of nestin+ or DCX+ cells in the amygdala periventricular nuclei; l. In another area, nests of DCX+ processes were also distinct from nestin-expressing cells. m. In the amygdala, although DCX+ processes were largely Iba1 negative, Iba1/DCX+ ramified DCX+ cells were observed (arrow). n. PDGFRβ and DCX in the amygdala showing distinct populations of small cells. o. DCX in the amygdala were mainly MCM2 negative. Bar is equivalent to 20 μm. Individual channels for immunofluorescence images are shown in Additional file 4: Figure S2
Fig. 4DCX mRNA expression data. a Significant DCX temporally differential expression between periods on temporal cortex (p value: 4.5e-113) [21]. Periods 1: Embryonic, 2: Early Fetal, 3: Early midfetal 4: Late midfetal- 5 Late fetal 6 Neonatal and early Infancy 7 Late infancy 8 Early childhood 9 Middle and Late adulthood 10:Adolescence 11: Young adulthood 12: Middle adulthood 13: Late adulthood b DCX expression on right (R) and left (L) temporal cortex on patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) [22] and controls [21] after correcting for batch differences. Periods 10, 11 and 12 c) DCX mRNA expression data from 83 TLE (divided into cases with or without temporal lobe sclerosis (TS) (neuronal loss from the superficial neocortex in addition to hippocampal sclerosis [43]) and controls from the MRC brain bank, Edinburgh, after correcting for batch, age, gender and RIN differences. Periods 10 to 13